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RAND M£NALLY

BANKERS
DIRECTORY
JANUARY 1926
PUBLISHED IN MARCH

A. G. Becker 6r Co.
Commercial Paper • Bonds
Chicago
ST. LOUIS»

New York

SAN FRANCISCO

SEATTLE

FPORTLAND

National Provincial Bank
LIMITED

Established 1833

Over 1100 Offices in England and Wales.
Agents Everywhere

Head Office: 15 BISHOPSGATE, LONDON, E. C. 2.

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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

i\

FORMAN FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS
Nationally Known Investments
That Will Increase Your Bond Sales
RMAN First Mortga
for Bank distribute
in thousands of transa
The Forman record of f
and the facts attestin,
known to Investors in al
This public confiden
estimable value to Bank
distributors of Safe Investrr?

F

ds are ideal investments
e safety has been proven
ny millions of dollars,
out loss to a customer
of Forman Bonds are
Forman Bonds is of in­
secure their position as

Write for detailed information regarding the
Forman Bond Distribution Plan for Banks

GEORGE M. FORMAN and COMPANY
First Mortgage Investments
105 W. Monroe St., CHICAGO

100 E. 42nd St., NEW YORK

“41 Years Without Loss to a Customer”
1

...

■■■

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■H ■■

The standard form
of check protection
first chemically-protected paper
—safety paper—was invented by
George La Monte in 1871.
Tested by over SO years of use,
National Safety Paper has been found
to be the most effective means of
protecting checks against fraudulent
alteration. That is why it is used by
thousands of banks and trust com­
panies, and is regarded as the standard
form of check protection.
Ask your lithographer.
HE

T
f see the inside
L back covers .


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

National Safety Paper
GEORGE LA MONTE & SON
61 Broadway, New York

■HHHMBUi

FouncV 1871

all sections of the country there are National City Company
offices where Banks, dealers, institutions and private investors may
obtain information on, or prices of Bonds, Short Term Notes and
Acceptances. Many of these offices are connected by an 11,000 mile
private telegraph system bringing them in close touch with New
York, and securing for customers the advantage of quick communi­
cation with the investment markets of the nation.
In

PRINCIPAL
Albany
Ten Eyck Building
Telephone 6090 Main
Atlanta
66 North Broad Street
Telephone Walnut 5070-71
Atlantic City
Chalfonte Block
Telephone Marine 749
Baltimore
Charles & Fayette Streets
Telephone 7471 Plaza
Boston
30 Congress Street
Telephone 8100 Main
Buffalo

Indianapolis
Fletcher Sav. & Tr. Building
Telephone Circle 7800
Kansas City
1017 Baltimore Avenue
Telephone 2706 Main
Los Angeles
5x3 West 6th Street
Telephone 7051 Trinity
Louisville, Ky.
Marion E. Taylor Building
Telephone Main 3574
Memphis
Bank of Commerce Bldg.
Telephone (Postal) 119
(Cumberland) 6-1083
Milwaukee
First Wis. Nat'l Bk. Building
Telephone 2590 Broadway
Minneapolis
Builders’ Exchange Building
Telephone 0888 Atlantic
Newark
Kinney Building

Ellicott Square Building
Tel. (Bell) 2472 Seneca

Chicago
137 So. La Salle Street
Telephone 7200 Randolph
Cincinnati
4th National Bank Building
Telephone 422 Main
Cleveland
Guardian Building
Telephone (Bell) 763 Cherry
Davenport
Putnam Building
Telephone 7935 Main
Denver

Telephone 1943 Market

New Orleans
Western Union Building
Telephone 6863 Main
Omaha
First National Bank Building
Telephone 3316 Jackson
Philadelphia
1417 Chestnut Street
Telephone 3400 Rittenhouse
Pittsburgh
Union Trust Building
Telephone 2980 Atlantic
Portland, Me.
Chapman Building
Telephone 6904 Forest
Portland, Ore.
United States Nat'l Bank Bldg.
Telephone Broadway 9220

718 Seventeenth Street

Telephone 1475 Main
Detroit
First National Bank Bldg.
Telephone 9121 Cadillac
Hartford
U. S. Security Trust Building
Telephone 2-3175
Houston
First National Bank Building
Telephone Preston 2465


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

CORRESPONDENT

OFFICES
Providence
12 Westminster St.
Telephone 3262 Union
Rochester
Wilder Building
Telephone 4464-5-6 Main
San Diego
Union Building
Telephone 264 Main
San Francisco
Standard Oil Building
Telephone 921 Kearny
Seattle
Hoge Building
Telephone 2254 Elliott
St. Louis
Boatmen’s Bank Bldg.,
Telephone 7140 Olive
Saint Paul
Merchants’ Nat’l Bank Bldg.
Telephone 0248 Cedar
Washington
74i-i5th Street, N. W.
Telephone 3176 Main
Wilkes-Barre
Miners’ Bank Building
Tel. (Bell) 2120 Wilkes-Barre
Montreal, Canada
205 St. James Street
Telephone 6493 Main
Toronto, Canada
10 King Street East
Telephone 6120 Main
London, E. C. 2, Eng.
34 Bishopsgate
Telephone London Wall 1737
Copenhagen, Denmark

16 Holmens Kanal
Geneva, Switzerland
1 rue de la Tour de l'lle
Telephone 51 89
Tokio, Japan
12 Nakadori Marunouchi
Telephone 1615 Marunouchi

The National City Company
MAIN OFFICE;;

National City Bank Building, NEW

YORK

Uptown Office National City Building, 42nd Street at Madison Avenue

Bonds

.

Short Term Notes

.

Acceptances

1926
FEBRUARY

JANUARY
s

M

T

F

T

w

s

s

2

4

3

5

6

7

MARCH

M

T

w

T

F

s

32

33

34

35

36

37

1 2

3

4

5

6

..

1 2 3

4

5

6

41

42

43

44

66

67

70

71

72

40

7 8 9 10 11 12 13

15

16

10 11 12 13 14 15 16
i22

23

17 18 19 20 21 22 23
24

25

26

27

28

65

39

45

21

s

64

38

7 8 9

20

F

63

. .

14

19

T

62

9

6

18

w

61

2

13

17

T

60

8

3 4 5
12

M

1
10

ii

s

29

30

24 25 26 27 28 29 30

46

47

49

48

50

52

53
22

54

55

56

57

69

7 8 9 10 11 12 13

51

73

14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21

68

74

75

76

77

78

79

14 15 16 17 18 19 20

58

80

23 24 25 26 27

81

82

83

84

85

86

21 22 23 24 25 26 27

59

87

28

88

89

90

28 29 30 31

31

31
APRIL
s

94

M

95

4

5

101

102

T

96
6

w

97

MAY

T

F

s

91
1

92

93

2

3

98

99

100

7 8

103 104 105

9 10
106

107

11 12 13 14 15 16 17
108

109

110 in 112

113

114

18 19 20 21 22 23 24
115

116

117 118 119

120

25 26 27 28 29 30

s

T

w

JUNE

T

F

s

s

M

121
1
122

123

124

12!

126 127

128

157

158

2

3

4

5 6 7

8

6

7

130

131

13; 133 134

135

164

165

9 10 11 12,13 14 15
136

137

138

13! 140 141

145

14

(

147 148

142

T

F

s

154

155

156

1 2

3

4

5

159 160

161

162

163

8 9 10 11 12
166 167

168

169

170

171

172

173 174

175

176

177

20 21 22 23 24 25 26

149

178

23 24 25 26 27 28 29
150

w

13 14 15 16 17 18 19

16 17 18 19120 21 22
144

T

152 153

129

143

. ,

M

179

180 181

27 28 29 30

151

30 31
JULY
s

185

M

w

186

187 188

5

6 7

4
192

T

193 194 195

AUGUST

T

F

s

s

M

182
1

183

184

214

2

3

213
1

189

190

191

220

221

8
196

9 10
197

198

11 12 13 14 15 16 17
199

200 201 202

203

204

205

18 19 20 21 22 23 24
206

207 208 209

210

211

212

25 26 27 28 29 30 31

8
227

M

276

277

T

w

278 279

T

280

241

242

F

s

274

275

1

2

281

282

s

M
305

311

236 237 238

239

240

243

1

t
248

302

303

T

F

s

308

309

310

6
317

8

24 25 26 27 28 29 30

T

5

319

296

w

306 307

316

7

295

250 251

5

6

7 8

256

257 258

T

F

s

245

246

247

2

3

4

252

253

254

9 10 11
259

260

261

9 10 11 12 13
320 321

322

323

324

14 15 16 17 18 19 20
325

326

327 328

329

330

331

21 22 23 24 25 26 27
332

333

334

28 29 30

263

264 265

266

267

268

19 20 21 22 23 24 25
270

271 272

273

DECEMBER

4

318

17 18 19 20 21 22 23

249

255

269

315

9

10 11 12 13 14 15 16

w

26 27 28 29 30

2 3

289


https://fraser.stlouisfed.org
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

233

313 314

8

304

232

1

288

31

229 230 231

312

7

301

7
226

T

244

NOVEMBER

287

299 300

6
225

29 30 31

5 6

298

5

M

262

235

285 286

297

3 4

222 223 224

s

234

4

294

219

22 23 24 25 26 27 28

284

292 293

s

218

12 13 14 15 16 17 18

3

291

F

217

w

9 10 11 12 13 14
228

283

290

T

215 216

15 16 17 18 19 20 21

OCTOBER
s

2

T

SEPTEMBER

s

M

T

w

T

F

s

335

336

337

338

1
339

340

341 342

5

6

7 8

346

347

348 349

2

3

4

343

344

345

9 10 11
350

351

352

12 13 14 15 16 17 18
353

354

355 356

357

358

359

19 20 21 22 23 24 25
360

361

362 363

364

365

26 27 28 29 30 31

When Buying Bonds
for Your Bank—
it is a source of satis­
faction and a measure
of protection to know
that the bond house
you deal with has made
a thorough and reli­
able investigation be­
fore identifying itself with
issues which it offers.

Because of the breadth
of its facilities and ex­
perience, Halsey, Stuart
& Co.’s endorsement
of a bond issue has an
accepted value which
simplifies the responsi­
bility of bank officers who select
bonds for investment of bank funds.

The following issues are representative of our offerings:
SHORT TERM

LONG TERM

NAME OF ISSUE

NAME OF ISSUE

Central Illinois Public Service Company
Serial Gold Notes

1926-1928

Central Indiana Power Company
3-Year 6% Collateral Gold Notes, Series A
.

Commonwealth Edison Company (Chicago)

1/1/1929

Cudahy Packing Company

2/1/1927

Detroit City Gas Company

First Mortgage 5% Gold Bonds

Government of the Argentine Nation
7% Gold Bonds...............................................

Government of Switzerland
5Vi% Gold Bonds........................................

8/1/1929

Kansas-Oklahoma Gas Company
6% First Mortgage Pipe Line Gold Bonds

8/1/1928

Morris & Company
7 lA% io-Year Sinking Fund Gold Notes

9/1/1930

Northern Indiana Gas & Electric Co.
5%% Secured Gold Notes, Series A .

6/1/1927

Peoples Gas Light & Coke Co. (Chica go)
3-Year 6% Secured Gold Notes, Series A

3/1/1927

Pressed Steel Car Company
5% Convertible Gold Bonds

....

1/1/1933

Pure Oil Company
6lA% Sinking Fund Gold Notes, Series A

6/1/1933

Vermont Hydro-Electric Corporation
First Mortgage 6% Gold Bonds, Series A

10/1/1929

West Penn Railways Company
3-Year 6A% Gold Debentures

First Mtge. 20-Year 5A% Guar. Gold Bonds
Series A............................................................1/1/1943

6/1/1928

Cohoes Power & Light Corporation
First Mortgage 6% Gold Bonds

MATURITY

Armour & Company of Delaware

First Mortgage 5% Gold Bonds

.

.

.

.

6/1/1943

.... 12/1/1946

First Mortgage 6% Gold Bonds, Series A

.

7/1/1947

First and Ref. Mtge. 6% Gold Bonds, Ser. A .

4/1/1953

Illinois Power & Light Corporation
Kansas City Power & Light Company
First Mtge. 30-Year 5% Gold Bonds, Ser. A .

9/1/1952

Metropolitan Edison Company (Penn.)
First and Ref. Mtge. 6% Gold Bonds, Ser. B

2/1/1952

Pennsylvania Power and Light Company
First and Ref. Mtge. Gold Bonds, Ser. D. 5%

9/1/1953

Public Service Company of Colorado
First Mtge. and Ref. 6% Gold Bonds, Ser. A

9/1/1953

Public Service Company of Northern Illinois
First Lien and Ref. Mtge. sA% Gold Bonds,
Series A............................................................6/1/1962

The Laclede Gas Light Co. (St. Louis, Mo.)

First Mtge. Coll, and Ref. 30-Yr. sA% Gold
Bonds, Series C...............................................2/1/1953

West Penn Power Company
4/1/1927

First Mortgage 5% Gold Bonds, Series A

3/1/1946

Current quotations and circulars completely descriptive
of any of the above will be supplied upon request

HALSEY, STUART & CO.
INCORPORATED

CHICAGO
201 S. La Salle St.
CLEVELAND
925 Euclid Ave.


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

NEW YORK
14 Wall St.
DETROIT
601 Griswold St.

PHILADELPHIA
in S. Fifteenth St.

MILWAUKEE
425 E. Water St.

ST. LOUIS
319 N. 4th St.

BOSTON
Devonshire St.
MINNEAPOLIS
610 Second Ave., S.

What Do You Owe Your Depositors
HRIFT does not end with mere saving—it also involves put­
ting the savings to work for the highest return commensurate
with safety. Banks, therefore, perform a normal function when
they advise their depositors how best to invest their savings in safe
and conservative bonds. A good sense of service requires that
every bank should be closely associated with a bond house of estab­
lished standing—not only as an obvious obligation to its customers,
but also as a means whereby its own surplus funds may be employed
to best advantage.
With such an association in view we invite your correspondence.

T

A. B. Leach & Co
Investment Securities
NEW YORK
62 Cedar St.

CHICAGO
105 S. La Salle St.

CLEVELAND
Guardian Bldg.

BOSTON
209 Washington St.

MINNEAPOLIS
1st Nat’l., Soo Line Bldg.

PHILADELPHIA
115 S. 4th St.

BUFFALO
935 Ellicott Square

DETROIT
Buhl Bldg.

MILWAUKEE
First Wis. Nat’l Bk. Bldg.

TACOMA
Paget Sound Nat’l Bk. Bldg.

KANSAS CITY
Victor Bldg.

ST. LOUIS
Security Bldg.

SEATTLE
Dexter Horton Building

PORTLAND
Porter Building

ALBANY
66 State St.

LLOYDS BANK
LIMITED.
OFFICE:

LONDON,

E.C. 3

The Bank has over 1 ,< 50 Offices in England and Wales
and several in India, Burmah and Egypt.
(30th June, 192S.)

DEPOSITS, &c.
ADVANCES, &c
The Bank also has Agents and Correspondents throughout the
British Empire and in all parts of the world, and is closely
associated with the following Banks:
THE NATIONAL BANK OF SCOTLAND LIMITED.
BANK OF LONDON AND SOUTH AMERICA LIMITED.
LLOYDS AND NATIONAL PROVINCIAL FOREIGN BANK LTD.


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

THE NATIONAL BANK OF NEW ZEALAND, LIMITED.
BANK OF BRITISH WEST AFRICA, LIMITED.
THE BRITISH ITALIAN BANKING CORPORATION, LIMITED.

RAND MCNALLY

BANKERS DIRECTORY
AND

BANKERS REGISTER
WITH LIST OF BONDED ATTORNEYS

THE BANKERS BLUE BOOK
Official Numbering Agent for American Bankers Association

JANUARY 1926
A Consolidation of
BANKERS DIRECTORY (Homan’s and Sharp & Alleman’s Edition)


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

FOUNDED 1845 (Oldest Bank Directory in the United States)

RAND M9NALLY BANKERS DIRECTORY
FOUNDED 1872

THE BANKERS REGISTER
FOUNDED 1888

-------------O-------------

100th EDITION

54th YEAR

Made in U. S. A.

RAND M9NALLY & COMPANY
CHICAGO
Copyright, 1926

by

Rand McNally & Company

CONTENTS
PAGE
Abstract of the Laws of the United States and Canada...................1717
Abyssinia—Banks (See Ethiopia).................. ......... ..........................
Accessible Banking Points to Non-bank Towns........................... ..1859
Africa—Attorneys........ ..................... —
......................................1706
—Banks........................ ..................-............................................... 1546
—Map................................................................................ opposite 1546
Alabama—Accessible Banking Points-----------------------1859
—Attorneys............ ....................................... —.................-......... 1607
—Banks___ ______________________________
33
—Bank Directors..............
1961
—Laws____________
1717
—Map, on "ALA” Index___ ____ _________ ____ ___ opposite 34
—State Bankers Association Officers......... ...................................
8
—(Members shown in Bank List by t after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Bank Examiners________
11
Alaska—Accessible Banking Points.............
1861
—Attorneys_________________________
1608
—Banks...........................................
48
—Bank Directors________
1965
—Laws....... ........................................
..1719
—Map, on Alaska Index........................ ...................— opposite 48
Albania—Banks____________
1558
—Map (Map of Europe)______
1544
Alberta—Accessible Banking Points.................................
1944
—Attorneys....... .........
1702
—Banks............................
1492
—Laws------------------- ------------------------------------- ----------—1836
—Map (Map of Canada)_______________________ opposite 1492
Algeria—Attorneys...................... ....................................... -............. 1706
—Banks______________________________________________ 1546
American Bankers Association Officers—............ ....... ...............8 and 9
(Members shown in Bank List by t after name of bank)
A. B. A. Numerical Transit System Map.................... ........... opposite 11
A. B. A. Transit Number
(Listed under name of each bank in Bank List)
Anglo-Egyptian Sudan
—Banks______________________________________
.1546
—Map (see map of Africa)________________________opposite 1546
Angola—Attorneys...............
1706
—Banks________________________________________ 1-------1546
Arabia—Banks......................
1551
Argentine Republic—Attorneys............. .............
1714
—Banks_____________________
1600
—Map, on Map of South America...................................opposite 1600
Arizona—Accessible Banking Points...................................................1861
—Attorneys.................... ........... .................. .............-.................... 1608
—Banks............ -..........................................................-................. 50
—Bank Directors...................................... ......... ........... -.................1965
—Laws...............
1721
—Map on Index “Ariz.”...................... .............................. .opposite 50
8
—State Bankers Association Officers.............
(Members shown in Bank List by t after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and State Bank Examiners—.................. 11
Arkansas—Accessible Banking Points.................
1861
—Attorneys........................-.........................-................................ 1609
—Banks....... ........................ -......... -.......................... -.................. 53
—Bank Directors..............
1966
—Laws.................................. -........................ -............................ .1723
—Map, on “Ark” Index------------------------------------------opposite 54
—State Bankers Association Officers........ ...............
8
(Members shown in Bank List by t after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Bank Examiners....... .......................... 11
Ashanti—(See Gold Coast)
Asia—Attorneys........ ......... ......... ....... ..............................-...............1707
—Banks..............
1551
Associations—American Bankers (Officers of).............. .....................
8
(Members shown in Bank List by • after name of bank)
—Farm Mortgage Association of America (Officers)___________ 10
—Investment Bankers Association of America Officers............ . 10
. (Members shown in Investments Lists by a H)
—State Bankers Associations Officers--------- --------- -................ 8-9
(Members shown in Bank List by t after name of bank)
Attorneys—United States andCanada (Bonded) —..........................1607
—Foreign Countries................................... ......... ............................1706
Australasia—Attorneys........... .......................... ...............-................ 1707
—Banks...................... ........................ -........................................... 1555
Austria—Attorneys...... ...................... -...............................................1708
—Banks______________________________________________ 1558
—Map (Map of New Europe)................ —................ .opposite 1544
Azores Islands—Attorneys............. ......... ...............-.......................... 1706
—Banks............................ ......... .......................-...........-.......... - - -1 £46
—Map (Map of Africa)................................... .................opposite 1546
Bahamas—Attorneys..................... -..................... -............................ 1714
—Banks.......................
---1599
—Map (Map of West Indies)______ _______________opposite 1598
Baluchistan—Banks........................
1551
Bank Directors of the United Statesand Canada.............
1961
Bank Examiners and State Bank Officials-------------------------11, 12, 13
Bank Examiners (National)----------------------------------------------.14, 15
Barbados—Attorneys.............. ........... -.............................................. 1714
—Banks................................................ —................................
1599
—Map (West Indies)____________ __________ -......... opposite 1598
Basutoland—Banks.------- -------------------------------------------------- 1546
—Map (Map of Africa)............................................... ...opposite 1546
Bechuanaland—Banks_____________________________________1546
—Map (Map of Africa)............... ...................................opposite 1546
Belgian Congo—Attorneys....... .........................................-...............1706
—Banks....................................................................................... - -1546
—Map (Map of Africa).............. .....................................opposite 1546
Belgium—Attorneys..................................—.......................... ......... 1708
—Banks.—..................................................
—Map (Map of New Europe)..........................................opposite 1544
Bermudas—Attorneys-----------1713
—Banks................................................... -.............-........................ 1»99
Bolivia—Attorneys............................... -.............................. ...............1714
—Banks.----------1601
—Map (map of South America)......................
oppositel600
Borneo— (See Dutch East Indies)
Brazil—Attorneys...............
1714
—Banks.............................. ....... .......................... -.................... - - -1601
—Map (map of South America)....................................... opposite 1600
British Columbia—Accessible Banking Points...................
1945
—Attorneys......... -.................. -.......................................................1702
—Banks_______
1496
—Bank Directors................. ......... ............................................
—Laws
_ ___ _
___ ______________________ 1839
—Map (map of Canada)................................................... opposite 1492
British Guiana—Attorneys_______________
1714


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

British Guiana—(Continued)
PAGE
—Banks......... ...............................................................................1601
—Map (map of South America).......... ..........................opposite 1600
British Honduras—Attorneys........ ....... ........................ .................. 1713
—Banks.......... ...................
..1599
Buffalo, N. Y.—Map______________________________opposite 904
Bulgaria—Attorneys........... .............
1708
1560
—Banks........................................................
—Map (map of New Europe)......................................... opposite 1544
California—Accessible Banking List.....................
..1863
—Attorneys....................................
..1610
—Banks........................................................
78
—Bank Directors........... ...................
1972
—Laws......... .................
1726
—Map on Index “Calif”..______________________ opposite 78
—State Bankers Association Officers_______________
8
(Members shown in Bank List by t after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Examiners_____________
ll
Cameroons (Kamerun)—(See French Equatorial Africa)
Canada—Accessible Banking Points....................................................1944
—Attorneys........................................
.1702
—Banks....... ..................................................
1492
—Bank Directors_______
.1957
—Laws...............
1836
—Map on Index “Canada”............................................opposite 1492
Canadian Bankers Association Officers...........................................
8
Canary Islands—Banks...................
.1546
—Map (map of Africa)............................. .....................opposite 1546
Cape of Good Hope (see Union of South Africa).............................. 1548
Cape of Verde Islands—Attorneys__________
1706
—Banks.....................................................................
1546
—Map (map of Africa)............... ......... ......... ...................opposite 1546
Cardinal Numbers and Commercial Terms in Ten Languages
(Table of).................... ................................................................... 17
Celebes—(See Dutch East Indies)
Central America—Attorneys__________
1713
—Banks........................
1599
Central Reserve Cities................................
19
Ceylon—Attorneys........................................
...1707
—Banks.___ ________
...1551
Channel Islands—(See England)
Chicago Map (central portion)...... .............................. ....... opposite 254
Chile—Attorneys.......... ................
1714
—Banks___ ________________ ____ ____________________ 1602
—Map (Map of South America).....................................opposite 1600
China—Attorneys......................................................... ....... .............1707
—Banks________
..1551
Chosen—(See Japan)
Clearing Houses of the United States and Canada (List of).32B & 32C
(Members of shown in Bank List by a *; affiliated banks
by a +)
Colombia—Attorneys........ ..................................................................1714
—Banks........... ............
1602
—Map (Map of South America)...... ..............................opposite 1600
Colorado—Accessible Banking Points....................................
1866
—Attorneys......................................
1613
—Banks........ ..................
136
—Bank Directors......... ............
..1982
—Laws______ f_____________________ _________________ 1730
—Map on Index“Col”......................................................opposite 136
—State Bankers Association Officers...............
8
(Members shown in Bank List by t after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Bank Examiners.................................
11
Comparative Consolidated figures (on Page 32D)...............opposite 33
Comptroller’s Calls to The National Banks........................opposite 11
(From September 9, 1886, to date)
Connecticut—Accessible Banking Points....................................
1867
—Attorneys_________________ __ ______ ____ __ ____ ___ 1614
152
—Banks..............
—Bank Directors..............................................
1986
—Laws........... ............
1733
—Map on Index “Conn”________________ _________ opposite 152
—State Bankers Association Officers............................................
8
(Members shown in Bank List by J after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Bank Examiners_________ _______ 11
Consolidated Capitulation for January 1926 Statements...opposite 33
Correspondents....... .................... ................................... ....................
(For each bank shown in Bank List under correspondents column)
Corsica—(See France)
Costa Rica—Attorneys_____________
1713
—Banks_____________________________________________ 1599
County of each Bank Town____________ _____ __ ______ ___
(Shown in Bank List under name of town)
County Seats............................. ........................................................
(Shown in Bank and Attorney Lists by a * before name of
town or city)
Cuba—Attorneys___ _______________
..1615
—Banks.......................................................... -................................ 1490
—Bank Directors______________
2314
—Laws_________
1855
—Map (See Map of West Indies).................................. .opposite 1598
C uracao—A ttomeys...................................................... ................... 1714
C y prus—Attorneys.................
1707
—Banks............................
1552
Czecho-Slovakia—Attorneys................................................................ 1708
—Banks---------1560
—Map (map of New Europe)........ .......................... ...... opposite 1544
Danzig—Banks_____________________ ______ _____________ 1561
—Map (map of New Europe)____________________ opposite 1544
Dates of the Regular Meetings of the State Legislatures.................. 1716
Days of Grace................................... .............-................................... 18
Delaware—Accessible
Banking Points..........................
1868
.1559
—Attorneys....... -................ ..........................................................1615
—Banks....... ..... .......................... —............................-................. 163
—Bank Directors...........................................................-.................1989
—Laws_______________________________________________1736
—Map................................................................... -...........opposite 162
—State Bankers Association Officers_______________________
8
(Members shown in Bank List by t after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Bank Examiners...........................
11
Denmark—Attorneys--------------1708
—Banks................................................ —........................ ............1561
—Map (see map of New Europe)......................... ...........opposite 1544
Digest of Banking and Commercial Laws of the United States
and Canada..______
1717
Directors—(List of United States and Canadian Bank Directors)..1961
District, of Columbia—Accessible Banking Points...... .............
1868
—Attorneys....................................................................................... 1615
—Banks........................................... ...................... -........................ 166

2

CONTENTS—(Continued)
District of Columbia—(Continued)
PAGE
1990
—Bank Directors...„.....
—Laws...................................................... ■.......................................1737
—Map, Indexed “D. C.”...... .............................................opposite 166
—State Bankers Association Officers........ ..................................... 8
(Members shown in Bank List by a % after name of bank)
Domestic Money Orders (see Postage Rates)....................................
7
Dominican Republic—Attorneys........................................................ 1714
—Banks______________________________________________ 1599
—Map (see map of West Indies)................................... opposite 1598
Dominion of Canada (map of), indexed “Canada”_____opposite 1492
Dutch East Indies—Attorneys...............................................
.1707
—Banks.........................................
1552
D utch Guian a—Attorneys........ ...................................
1714
—Banks______________________________________________ 1602
—Map (see map of South America)................................opposite 1600
Ecuador—Attorneys.............
.1714
—Banks......... ................................................................................1602
—Map (see Map of South America)................................opposite 1600
Egypt—Attorneys........ .......................................................................1706
—Banks_________ ____________ ____ ___________ _____ —1546
—Map (see Map of Africa).......... .............................. ..opposite 1546
England and Wales—Attorneys..................................
1708
—Banks______________________________________________ 1562
—Map on London Index_________________________opposite 1570
Eritrea—Banks_______
1547
—Map (See Map of Africa)______________________ opposite 1546
Estonia—Banks_________________________________________ 1582
—Map (see Map of New Europe)...................................opposite 1544
Ethiopia (Abyssinia)—Banks...................
1547
—Map (Map of Africa)..................................................opposite 1546
Europe—Attorneys.........................................................
..1708
—Banks..______
-1558
—Map indexed “Foreign”................... ...........................opposite 1544
Examiners and Districts (National)................................................. 14, 15
Examiners (State and State Bank Officials)..............................11, 12, 13
Express Money Order Rates (see Postage Rates)............................
7
Farm Mortgage Bankers Association Officers..................
10
Federal Farm Loan Board.................
32
Federal Land Banks and their data.................
32
(Also listed in Bank List in Cities where located)
Federal Reserve—Advisory Council.................................................... 20
—Advisory Board______________________________________ 20
Federal Reserve Bank Information............ ..................... .......... 20 to 32
Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta (District 6) with Branches........ . 25
“
“
“ “ Boston (District 1)...........
21
“
“
“ “ Chicago (District 7) with Branch______ 26
“
“
“ " Cleveland (District 4) with Branches___ 23
"
"
“ “ Dallas (District 11) with Branches........... 30
“
“
" “ Kansas City, Mo. (District 10) with
Branches_________________
29
Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis (District 9) with Branch.. 28
“
“
“ “ New York (District 2) with Branch......... 22
....................................Philadelphia (District 3).......................... 23
“
"
“ Richmond (District 5) with Branch_____ 24
'*
“
“ “ San Francisco (District 12) with Branches 31
“
"
“ “ St. Louis (District 8) with Branches____ 27
Federal Reserve Map, showing the Twelve Districts........... opposite 18
“
“
“ of District 7______________ ____ opposite 256
Federal Reserve Districts in which Banking Town is located
(Is shown in Bold Face figure under name of town or see top
of first column bank pages)
Federal Reserve Members (State Banks and Trust Companies)
(Shown in Bank List by a ♦ under name of bank)
Federated Malay States—Banks........... ...........................
..1553
Fernando Po—(see Spanish Guinea)
Fiji Islands—Attorneys____________________
1707
—Banks______________________________________________ 1555
Finland—Attorneys.. ...........................................................................1711
—Banks____________
1582
—Map (see Map of New Europe)................................. :_______ 1544
Flume—Banks........................
1582
—Map (see Map of New Europe)........ .........................................1544
Florida—Accessible Banking Points..._________
1868
—Attorneys_________________
1615
—Banks.......................
172
—Bank Directors.................................
1991
—Laws......................................
1739
—Map.............. .............. ..... ...........................................opposite 172
—State Bankers Association Officers..........................
8
(Members shown in Bank List by a t after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Bank Examiners.................................. 11
Foreign Attorneys (Selected List)..........................................
1706
“
Banks...............................................................
1546
“
Coins (Value of)....................................... ............................. 16
Foreign Languages (Table of cardinal numbers and com­
mercial terms in ten languages)_____ ______ _______ opposite 17
Foreign Parcel Post Rates.............................
7
Foreign Postal Table__________
7
Fort Map showing United States Military Posts_______opposite 32
France—Attorneys_________
1711
—Banks....... ..........
1582
—Map (see Map of New Europe)............ .....................opposite 1544
French Equatorial Africa—Attorneys_____________
1706
—Banks__________ ________ ________ _________ ________ 1547
—Map (Map of Africa)................................................ opposite 1546
French Guiana—Banks...............................................
1602
—Map (see Map of South America)....... ........................opposite 1600
French Indo China—Attorneys .......... ........... .............................. 1707
—Banks______________
......1553
French Somoliland—Banks_______
1547
Map (See Map of Africa)_______________________ opposite 1546
French West Africa—Attorneys.........................................................1706
—Banks.................«............................................................................1547
—Map (see Map of Africa)...................................
1546
Gambia—Attorneys........... ..........................................
1706
—Banks..............
1547
—Map (see Map of Africa)................................... .........opposite 1546
Georgia—Accessible Banking Points.................
1869
—Attorneys.................
1616
—Banks...............................
189
—Bank Directors....... ........
1995
—Laws........................... ...................... .....................................— 1741
—Map on “Ga.” Index__________ _____ __________ opposite 196
—State Bankers Associations Officers___ ___________________
8
(Members shown in Bank List by a $ after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Bank Examiners................. ............... 11
Germany—Attorneys...........................................
1711
—Banks....... ..............
1586
—Map (see Map of New Europe)...... ...........................opposite 1544
Gibraltar (see Spain)...................
1597

Goa—Attorneys............ ....................
1707

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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

3

PAGE
Gold Coast and Ashanti—Attorneys.................................................. 1706
—Banks..............
1547
—Map (see Map of Africa)______ _______ _________ opposite 1546
Grace on Sight Drafts for the United States and Canada............... 18
Greece—Attorneys................................................................................1712
—Banks...............................
1588
—Map (see Map of New Europe).......... ......................... opposite 1544
Grenada—Attorneys........ .................
1714
—Map (see Map of West Indies)................................... opposite 1598
Guadaloupe—Attorneys__________________________________ 1714
—Banks______________________________________________ 1600
—Map (See Map of West Indies)_________________ opposite 1598
Guatamala—Attorneys............ .............................................
1713
—Banks......................................................................................
1599
Haiti—Attorneys.......... ..........
1714
—Banks.........................
1600
—Map (see Map of West Indies)................................... opposite 1598
Hawaii—Accessible Banking Points................
1871
—Attorneys___________________________________________ 1619
—Banks......... ........
230
—Bank Directors____________
2002
—Map, indexed “Hawaii”................. .............................opposite 230
Holidays (See Interest Rates, Grace on Sight Drafts, Etc______
18
(See also Laws for Legal Holidays)
Holland—Attorneys______________________________________ 1712
—Banks............ ..........
..1589
—Map (see Map of New Europe)........ .........................opposite 1544
Honduras—Attorneys......................
..1713
—Banks........... ........
1599
Hongkong—Attorneys............ ............
1707
—Banks..............................................................................................1551
Hungary—Attorneys............................................................................ 1712
—Banks........... ..............................
1589
—Map (see Map of New Europe).....................................opposite 1544
I celand—Attorneys.......... .................
1712
—Banks...........................
1589
—Map—(see Map of New Europe).................................opposite 1544
Idaho—Accessible Banking Points.......................................
1871
—Attorneys-...............................................................
1619
—Banks......... ......................
231
—Bank Directors..............
2003
—Laws__________
1743
—Map, indexed “Idaho”............................ .......... ..........opposite 232
—State Bankers Association Officers..................
8
(Members shown in Bank List by a J after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Bank Examiners....... ..........
11
Illinois—Accessible Banking Points............ ........................................1872
—Attorneys............................................
..1620
—Banks______________________________________________ 239
—Bank Directors..........................................................
2005
—Laws.....................................
1745
—Map, indexed “Illinois”................................................ opposite 238
Map of Chicago (Central portion)........................................opposite 254
Map of Federal Reserve District 7........................................opposite 256
—State Bankers Association Officers............... .............
8
(Members shown in Bank List by a J after name of bank)
11
—State Bank Officials and Bank Examiners____ _____
India—Attorneys......................
1707
—Banks..........................................................
1553
Indiana—Accessible Banking Points...................................................1874
—Attorneys_________________________________
1625
—Banks______________________________________________ 350
—Bank Directors__________________________
2027
—Laws____________________
1748
—Map—indexed “Ind”______________________ ____ opposite 350
—Map of Indianapolis................................. ...................... opposite 372
—State Bankers Association Officers.................
8
(Members shown in Bank List by a J after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Examiners............................................ 11
Indianapolis—Map.......... ......................... ............................opposite 372
Interest Rates (table of).........................
18
(Also found under Laws of each state)
Interest Rates by contract________________
18
International Money Orders...............................................................
7
Investment Bankers Association................
10
(Members shown by a 1 in Investment Lists)
Investment Dealers (Selected List)
(Following banks in each city where listed)
Ionian Islands—(See Greece)
Iowa—Accessible Banking Points....................................................... 1876
—Attorneys.......................
1628
—Banks..............
403
—Bank Directors.............................................................................. 2039
—Laws_____ ____
1751
—Map—indexed “Iowa”________________________ .opposite 402
—State Bankers Association Officers....................
8
(Members shown in Bank list by a t after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Examiners.................
11
Irak—Banks.....................
1553
Irish Free State and Northern Ireland—Attorneys..........................1712
—Banks_______________
1589
—Map (see Map of New Europe).................................. opposite 1544
Italian Somaliland—Banks___________________
1547
—Map (see Map of Africa).. ....................... ................ opposite 1546
I taly—Attorney........ ...............
1712
—Banks............................ ............ ........................................ .........1590
—Map (see Map of New Europe)........ ..........................opposite 1544
J amalca—Attorneys.........................
1714
—Banks............................................................
1600
—Map (see Map of West Indies)....................................opposite 1598
Japan—Attorneys................................................................................1707
—Banks.......................................................
1554
Java—(See Dutch East Indies)
Johore—Banks..................
1554
Joint Stock Land Banks and Territory...........................................32A
(Also in proper places in Bank List)
Jugo Slavia—(See Kingdom of the Serbs, Croates and Slovenes)
Kansas—Accessible Banking Points..............
1877
—Attorneys.............................................
1633
—Banks____________________________________
480
—Bank Directors______________________________________ 2057
—Laws.___ ___________
..1753
—Map, indexed “Kans.”. .............................................. opposite 480
—State Bankers Association, Officers..........................
8
(Members shown in Bank List by a J after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Examiners..................
11
Kabinda—Banks.......................
.1547
—Map (See map of Africa............................................. Opposite 1544
Kedah—Banks.............................
1555
Kelanton—Banks ....................
..1555
Kentucky—Accessible Banking Points................
1878
—Attorneys....... ...............
1637
—Banks____________________________
531

4

CONTENTS—(Continued)

Kentucky—(Continued)
PAGE
—Bank Directors........................................_......... ......................... 2071
—Laws......................
1756
—Map, indexed “Ky.”............... .......................................opposite 532
—State Bankers Association, Officers.............................-.............
8
—Members shown in Bank List by a t after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Examiners........ .................................... 11
Kenya—Attorneys______
1706
—Banks__________________________________
1547
—Map (see map of Africa)_______ ______________ opposite 1546
Kingdom of the Serbs, Croates and Slovenes (Yugo Slavia)
—Attorneys........ .................. -...........-____ ___________ _____ 1712
—Banks_____________________________________________ 1592
—Map (see Map of New Europe)________________ opposite 1544
Latvia or Lettonia—Banks —...................._....................... ........... 1592
—Map (see Map of New Europe)_________________ opposite 1544
Laws of the United States and Canada (Digest of).____ _______ 1717
Lawyers of the United States and Canada (Bonded).......... .............1607
Lawyers of Foreign Countries (Selected List)......................
1706
1714
Leeward Islands—Attorneys..................................
—Banks.................................
1600
—Map (see Map of West Indies)........................... ......... opposite 1598
Legal Rate of Interest (Table of)____ _______________________ 18
(See also Laws)
Legislatures (Dates of Regular Meetings)...........................................1716
Liberia—Attorneys................................................................................1706
—Banks............................-............................................................... 1547
—Map (see Map of Africa)_______________________ opposite 1546
Libya—Attorneys________________________________________ 1706
—Banks-----------------1547
—Map (see Map of Africa)______________________ opposite 1546
Lithuania—Banks_______________________________________ 1592
—Map (see Map of New Europe)..........................
1544
Location of Banking Towns and Cities on State Maps
(Indicated by Guide Letter and Figure under each town)
Lombok—(See Dutch East Indies)_________________________
Louisiana—Accessible Banking Points—-------------1883
—Attorneys___________________________________________ 1639
—Banks______________________________________________ 558
—Bank Directors_______________________________________2078
—Laws........................... ......................................... -...................—1758
—Map—indexed "La.”________ ______ ____________ opposite 558
8
—State Bankers Association, Officers......... ........................
(Members shown in Bank List by a J after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Examiners....................
11
Luxembourg—Attorneys.—....................
..1712
—Banks....... .................... ................................-.............................. 1592
—Map (see Map of New Europe)_________________ opposite 1544
M adagascar Island—Attorneys....................
..1706
—Banks______________________________________________ 1547
—Map (see Map of Africa)............................................. opposite 1546
Madeira Island—Attorneys............................
...1706
—Banks...............
..1547
—Map (see Map of Africa)_______________________opposite 1546
Maine—Accessible Banking Points....... ............................................. 1885
—Attorney s...................................................................-.................1640
—Banks.......................... ....................................—........................574
—Bank Directors.......................
2082
—Laws___ __________
1761
—Map, indexed "Me.”___ _______ _______________ opposite 574
—State Bankers Association, Officers........... .............
8
(Members shown in Bank List by a t after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Examiners.............................
11
Malta—Attorneys..........................................................................
1712
—Banks._______
..1592
—Map (see Map of New Europe)................................... opposite 1544
Manitoba—Accessible Banking Points....... ....................
1947
—Attorneys.................................
1702
—Banks_____ ________________________________________ 1499
•—Bank Directors...------ ----------------2313
1841
—Laws................
—Map............................................. ........................ ....... opposite 1498
Martinique—Attorneys...........................
1714
—Banks______________________________________________ 1600
—Map (see Map of West Indies).......... ......... .................opposite 1598
Maryland—Accessible Banking Points.....................
1881
—Attorneys.................
1641
—Banks______________________________________________ 581
—Bank Directors..............................
2084
—Laws...........................
1763
—Map, indexed "Md."............................................ ....... opposite 582
—State Bankers Association, Officers........... .............
8
(Members shown in Bank List by a J after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Examiners..................................
11
Massachusetts—Accessible Banking Points______
1888
—Attorneys...........................
1642
—Banks_____ _________
595
—Bank Directors____ ________
2088
—Laws_____ ____ _____ ____ ______ -____ ______________1765
—Map, indexed "Mass.”___________________ _____ opposite 594
—State Bankers Association, Officers..................
8
(Members shown in Bank List by a t after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Examiners............................................ 11
Mauritius—Attorneys.......................
1706
—Banks______________________________________________ 1547
—Map (see Map of Africa).......... ......... .......................... opposite 1546
Mesopotamia (See Irak).......... .................. ........... ............................
Mexico—Attorneys.......... ......
..1714
—B anks__________ ____ _____________ ____ _____________1544
—Map, indexed "Mexico”_______ ____ __________ opposite 1542
Michigan—Accessible Banking Points......................
1890
—Attorneys..............................
1643
—Banks....... ..........
619
—Bank Directors................................. ..........................!_______ 2096
—Laws...............................
..1767
—Map, indexed “Mich.”........ ......... ...................... ........... opposite 620
8
—State Bankers Association, Officers............................................
(Members shown in Bank List by f after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Examiners..______ ______________ 12
Military Posts of the U. S............... ....... ..............................opposite 32
Military Posts of the U. S. (Map of)__________________ opposite 32
Minneapolis, Minn., (Map)................................................ .opposite 698
Minnesota—Accessible Banking Points............................
1892
—Attorneys—............................................
1646
—Banks ....................
665
—Bank Directors........... ...............
2105
—Laws___________
1770
—Map, indexed "Minn.”............... ....................................opposite 664
—Map of Minneapolis____________________________ opposite 688
—Map of St. Paul........ ........................ .............................. opposite 714
—State Bankers Association, Officers___ ________
8
—(Members shown in Bank List by i after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Examiners..............................
12
Mississippi—Accessible Banking Points..........................
.1893


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

Mississippi—(Continued)
PAGE
—Attorneys.................................. ..................... ....... .................... 1650
—Banks______________ :_____________ ____ _____________725
—Bank Directors............. ....... ......... .......... ................................... 2120
—Laws....... ........................................ ..... ...................... ................1771
—Maps, indexed “Miss.”....... ........................ ..................opposite 724
—State Bankers Association, Officers....... ....................................
8
—(Members shown in Bank List by J after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Examiners______________
12
Missouri—Accessible Banking Points...................
1895
—Attorneys___________________________________________ 1652
—Banks.........................
740
—Bank Directors......................
2124
—Laws___ _____
1774
—Map, indexed “Mo.”....... ............................... .............opposite 740
—Map of St Louis_____________________________ opposite 802
—State Bankers Association, Officers__________ ___________.
8
(Members shown in Bank List by J after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Examiners.......................................
12
Moluca Islands (See Dutch East Indies).......... ..............................
Monaco—Attorneys________________________________
1712
Money Orders (International and Domestic)...................................
7
Montana—Accessible Banking Points........................
1898
—Attorneys...................
1657
—Banks............
816
—Bank Directors___________
2141
—Laws...........................................................
1776
—Map, indexed “Mont.”................................................... opposite 816
—State Bankers Association, Officers........... ..................................
8
(Members shown in Bank List by t after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Examiners............................................ 12
Morocco—Attorneys______________________________________ 1706
—Banks....... .....................
1547
—Map (see Map of Africa)............................................. opposite 1546
Mozambique—Attorneys_____ ____
1706
—Banks_____________________________________________ 1547
—Map (see map of Africa)______________________opposite 1546
Natal. See Union of South Africa_______ _________________ .1549
National Bank, Examiners and Districts________
14-15
National Banks (number of) (on Page 32 D)____________opposite 33
Nearest—Accessible Banking Points..................
1859
Nebraska—Accessible Banking Points.......................
1899
—Attorneys__________
1658
—Banks._____ __________
826
2144
—Bank Directors.............................
—Laws_______________________________________________1778
—Map, indexed “Neb.”___________ ________ _____ opposite 826
—State Bankers Association, Officers..................
8
(Members shown in Bank List by % after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Examiners............................
12
Negotiable Instruments Law (States having)............... .................. 1715
(Also see Laws.)
Nevada—Accessible Banking Points........................
..1900
—Attorneys....... ................... ....................................................—1661
—Banks______________________________________________ 868
—Bank Directors.............................................................................. 2155
—Laws___ ____
1781
—Map, indexed “Nev.”...................................................opposite 868
—State Bankers Association, Officers................
8
(Members shown in Bank List by $ after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Examiners......................
12
New Britain—Banks__ _____
1555
New Brunswick—Accessible Banking Points......................................1948
—Attorneys_______________________
1703
—Banks_______________________________________
..1502
—Laws_______________________________________________ 1843
—Map......... .............................................. ......... .............opposite 1504
1707
New Caledonia—Attorneys...............................
—Banks_________
1555
Newfoundland—Accessible Banking Points........................................1948
—Attorneys-................
1703
—Banks______________________________________________ 1504
—Directors________
2313
—Map on map of Canada__ ____ _______________ opposite 1492
New Hampshire—Accessible Banking Points.....................
1900
—Attorneys...................
1661
—Banks..____________________________________________ 870
—Bank Directors_______
2155
—Laws.........................
1782
—Map, indexed “N. H.”................................................... opposite 870
—State Bankers Association, Officers.................................
8
(Members shown in Bank List by t after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Examiners..............
12
New Ireland—Banks........................................................
1555
New Jersey—Accessible Banking Points..................
...1901
—Attorneys___________________________________________ 1661
—Banks....... .........................
874
—Bank Directors________________________________
..2157
—Laws____ ____________________________________
.1784
—Map, indexed “N. J.”___ ____ ________________ opposite 874
—State Bankers Association, Officers____________
8
(Members shown in Bank List by t after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Examiners___________ ________ — 12
New Mexico—Accessible Banking Points________
..1902
—Attorneys___ _________________________________
1663
—Banks____ _________________________________________ 895
—Bank Directors____ ________
..2165
—Laws____________
1786
—Map, indexed “N. M.”_____ __________________ opposite 894
—State Bankers Association, Officers............................................
8
(Members shown in Bank List by i after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Examiners........ .................................. 12
New South Wales—Attorneys...... ............................
1707
—Banks.................
1555
New York—Accessible Banking Points...............................................1903
—Attorneys..............................................................-.................... 1663
—Banks____________________________________
898
2165
—Bank Directors....................
—Laws______
1788
—Map, indexed “N. Y.”........ ......... ...............................opposite 898
—Map of Buffalo................................. ........................... opposite 904
—Map of N. Y. City (Southern Portion).....................opposite 922
—Map of Greater New York and Vicinity........... .........opposite 924
—Savings Bank Association of the State of New York________
9
—State Bankers Association, Officers______
8
(Members shown in Bank List by t after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Examiners............................................ 12
New York City Map (Southern Portion)...........................opposite 922
New York City Map (Greater New York and Vicinity)..opposite 924
New Zealand—Attorneys....................
1707
—Banks__________
1556
N icaragua—Attorneys.....................
1713
—Banks_______________________________
1599
Nigeria—Attorneys........................
1706

CONTENTS—(Continued)
Nigeria—(Continued)
PAGE
—Banks......................................................... -.............—.............1547
—Map. (See Map of Africa)_____________________opposite 1546
Non-Bank Towns showing nearest Banking Point______ ____ __ 1859
North America, (except U. S. and Canada) Attorneys__________1713
Northern Territory—Banks................................
1557
North Carolina—Accessible Banking Points.......................................1909
—Attorneys-...................................
1666
—Banks_______________________
981
—Bank Directors___ _______
.2182
—Laws............. ........................ ....................................... -.........—1790
—Map. indexed “N. Car.”_____ ____________ _____ opposite 982
—State B ankers Association, Officers...........................................
9
(Members shown in Bank List by J after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Examiners__________
12
North Dakota—Accessible Banking Points......... .............................. 1911
..1668
—Attorneys____________________
—Banks___________________________ ______ ______ -.........1010
—Bank Directors___ _______
2192
—Laws______________________________
1793
—Map, indexed ‘‘N. Dak.”______________________ opposite 1010
—State Bankers Association, Officers.............................................
9
(Members shown in Bank List by t after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Examiners__________
13
Norway—Attorneys__________________ _______ ____________1712
—Banks______________________________________ —...........1592
—Map (see Map of New Europe)_________________ opposite 1544
Notes and Acceptances due on Holidays.......................................... 18
Notes and Acceptances due on Half Days____________________ 18
Nova Scotia—Accessible Banking Points........................................ 1949
—Attorneys___________________________________________ 1703
—Banks___________________________ ____ ______________1504
—Bank Directors_______ _____ _________________________2313
—Laws____________________________________ ____ _____ 1844
—Map....................... ....... ...................... ......... ................ opposite 1504
Number of Banks in United States and Canada............ opposite 33
Numerical System of the American Bankers Assn. Map..opposite 10
Numerical System of the A. B. A. (Explanation of).................... .
15
Nyasaland Protectorate—Attorneys........................... ....................1706
—Bank______________________ ________________________ 1548
—Map (see Map of Africa)___ ______ _____________opposite 1546
Ohio—Accessible Banking Points........................................... ...........1911
—Attorneys_________ ____ ____________________________.1670
—Banks______________________________________________ 1034
—Bank Directors____ ______ ______ ____ _____ _____ ____ 2196
—Laws........... ............................. ............................. ...................... 1796
—Map, indexed "Ohio”....................................................opposite 1034
—State Bankers Association, Officers...................... .....................
9
(Members shown in Bank List by t after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Examiners.................................... ....... 13
Oklahoma—Accessible Banking Points........ ...................................1915
—Attorneys....... ......................................................................... ...1674
—Banks.__________ __________________________________ 1094
—Bank Directors_____ ________ ___________ ____ ________ 2209
—Laws____________________________________ ______ ___ 1799
—Map, indexed “Okla.”............... ....... ..........................opposite 1094
—State Bankers Association, Officers........... .................. ..............
9
(Members shown in Bank List by J after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Examiners................................. ......... 13
Ontario—Accessible Banking Points_________ __________ _____ 1952
—Attorneys........... ...........................................................................1703
—Banks______________________________________________ 1506
—Bank Directors............. ......................................... ..................... 2314
—Laws______ ____________________ ___________________ 1846
—Map............................................................ ..................opposite 1520
Orange Free States (see Union of South Africa)......................... 1550
Oregon—Accessible Banking Points................................................. .1917
—Attorneys_________________________________ _________ 1676
—Banks........... ............................................. ...................................1130
—Bank Directors________ ________ _____________________ 2217
—Laws_____________________ __ ______ _________ ______ 1802
—Maps, indexed “Ore.”........... .................... ..................opposite 1130
—State Bankers Association, Officers_______ ______________
9
(Members shown in Bank List by t after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Examiners_______________ ______ 13
Palestine—Attorneys_____________________________________ 1707
—Banks____________________ ____ ____________________ 1555
Parcel Post Hates (Table of Foreign and Domestic)........................
7
Panama—Attorneys...........................................................................1714
—Banks.............................................................................. ..............1599
Papua—Attorneys____________ ___________________ _______ 1708
—Banks______________________________________________ 1557
Paraguay—Attorneys...........................................................................1714
—Banks................. ...........................................................................1602
—Map (see Bank of South America)_______________ opposite 1600
Pennsylvania—Accessible Banking Points........................ .............1917
—Attorneys...................................................................................... 1677
—Banks______________________________________________ 1141
—Bank Directors______________________________________ 2220
—Laws_______________________________________________ 1805
—Map, indexed “Penn”.............................................. .opposite 1142
—Map of Philadelphia and Vicinity.................... ..........opposite 1182
—Map of Philadelphia (main portion)......... ..... .............opposite 1186
—Map of Philadelphia and Environs.................... .......opposite 1188
—Map of Pittsburgh (main portion)..............................opposite 1198
—State Bankers Association, Officers......... ......... ..........................
9
(Members shown in Bank List by t after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Examiners............................................ 13
Persia—Banks....... ............
1555
Peru—Attorneys...........................
1714
—Banks..____________
1602
—Map (see Map of South America).................... .........opposite 1600
Philadelphia, Pa., Map (main portion)______________ opposite 1186
Philadelphia, Pa., and Vicinity, Map_______________ opposite 1182
Philippine Islands—Attorneys____ ________________
1681
—Banks_________________________________
1490
—Laws_______________________________________________ 1806
—Map................ ........................... ........... .... ..................opposite 1490
Pittsburgh, Pa., Map (main portion)____ ____________opposite 1198
Poland—Attorneys__________
1713
—Banks____________________________________
1593
—Map (see Map of New Europe)__ ____ ___________ opposite 1544
Population of Banking Towns shown by figures under name of
Bank List and before town in Lawyers List.
Portugal—Attorneys______________________________________ 1713
—Banks______________________________________________ 1593
—Map (see Map of New Europe)_________________ opposite 1544
Postage Rates and Regulations................
7
Porto Rico—Attorneys......................
1681
—Banks________
1491
—Map (see Map of West Indies)..................................... opposite 1598
Prince Edward Island—Accessible Banking Points------------------- 1951
—Attorneys..............................................
1704
—Banks___________________________
..1524
—Laws.........
................................,.......
..........................
.................1849


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

Prince Edward Island—(Continued)
PAGE
—Map....................................... .................................... opposite 1504
Private Banks of the United States (number of).............opposite 33
(Shown in Bank List by t after name of each bank)
Quebec—Accessible Banking Points..................
1951
—Attorneys_____________________________
1704
—Banks.........................
1525
—Bank Directors_________________________________
2314
—Laws..................
1851
—Map........................... ...................................................opposite 1530
Queensland—Attorneys...............................................................
1708
—Banks____ _____
1557
Rates of Postage (Domestic and Foreign)..........................................
7
Rates for Express Money Orders...............................................
7
Rates of Parcel Postage.....................
7
Republic of Panama—Banks........................
1599
Reserve Cities and Central Reserve Cities.......... ..................
19
Reserves Required under Federal Reserve Act................................. 19
Reunion—Attorneys..............
...1706
—Banks______________________________________________ 1548
Rhode Island—Accessible Banking Points....................................... 1925
—Attorneys-........................................-.........................................1682
—Banks______________________________________________ 1223
—Bank Directors..................
2244
—Laws..................
1807
—Map indexed “R. I.”.................................................. opposite 1224
9
—State Bankers Association, Officers....... ......
(Members shown in Bank List by t after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Examiners........................
13
Rhodes—Banks....................................
..1555
Rhodesia—Attorneys.......—................. —........................................... 1706
—Banks................
1548
—Map (see Map of Africa)...............................................opposite 1546
Romania—Attorneys____________________ —..... ................ ....... 1713
—Banks______________________________________________ 1594
—Map (see Map of New Europe) ........................... .......opposite 1544
Russia—Attorneys........... ................
1713
—Banks_________
1594
—Map (see Map of New Europe)...................................opposite 1544
St. Croix—Attorneys....... ...........
1714
—Banks______________________________________________ 1600
—Map (see Map of West Indies)........ ....................... opposite 1598
St. Louis, Mo., Map.............. .......................................... ..opposite 802
St. Paul, Minn., Map................ ............................................ opposite 714
St. Pierre et Miquelon—Banks.............................................
1538
—Map (Map of Dominion of Canada).........................opposite 1492
St. Thomas—Attorneys............................
1714
—Banks________
1600
—Map (see Map of West Indies)................ ................... opposite 1598
Salvador—Attorneys.......................................
1714
—Banks................
1599
—Map (see West Indies).................................................opposite 1598
Samoa Island—Attorneys...................
1708
—Banks_____________________
1558
Saskatchewan—Accessible Banking Points.................................. ...1958
—Attorneys......... . ..............
1706
—Banks_______________________________________
..1538
—Bank Directors........... ..................................
2314
—Laws_______________________________________________ 1853
—Map (see Map of Dominion of Canada)......... ............opposite 1492
Savings Department (Banks Having)
(Shown in Bank List by a ® after name of bank)
Scotland—Attorneys...........................
1713
—Banks_______
1594
—Map (see Map of New Europe)................ .................opposite 1544
Senegal— (see French West Africa)
Siam—Attorneys..................
1707
—Banks______________________________________________ 1555
Siberia—Banks..................
1555
Sierra Leone—Attorneys..................................................
1706
—Banks...........................................................................................1548
—Map (see Map of Africa).................. ....... .................. .opposite 1546
South America—Attorneys.........................
1714
—Banks..................
1600
—Map, indexed “So. Am.”..............■_............................. opposite 1598
South Australia—Attorneys______ ____ —................................. .1708
—Banks___ ________________________
1558
South Carolina—Accessible Banking Points.......................................1926
—Attorneys—-------- -----------1682
—Banks______________________________________________ 1226
—Bank Directors.................
2244
—Laws...........................
1809
—Map, indexed “S. C.”_______ _________________ opposite 1226
—State Bankers Association, Officers__ ____
9
(Members shown in Bank List by t after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Examiners.......................
13
South Dakota—Accessible Banking Points...................................... .1927
—Attorneys___________________________________________ 1683
—Banks_____________________
1246
—Bank Directors______________________________________ 2249
—Laws........................
1812
—Map, indexed "S. D.”_________________________opposite 1246
9
—State Bankers Association Officers_______________________
(Members shown in Bank List by t after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Examiners________
13
South West Africa—Banks.....................
1548
—Map (See Map of Africa)............................................. _oppositel546
Spain—Attorneys................
1713
—Banks...__________
1597
—Map (see Map of New Europe)........ ..... .................... opposite 1544
Spanish Guinea—Banks.......................................................................1548
State Bankers Associations and Officers...................
9
(Members shown in Bank List by J after name of bank)
State Bank Officials and Examiners........ ..... .................. .........11,12,13
State Banks of the United States (number of)........ ...........opposite 33
(Shown in Bank List by a § after name of bank)
Statute of Limitations (arranged for quick reference).................. 18
(See also “Laws” indexed)
Straits Settlement—Attorneys........................................................—1707
—Banks_______
1555
Sumatra—(see Dutch East Indies)
Swaziland—Banks_______________________________
1548
—Map (see Map of Africa)..............................................opposite 1546
8weden—Attorneys_________ ________ —--------------------------1713
—Banks............................ —------------------------- -------- --------- 1598
—Map (see Map of New Europe).......... .......................opposite 1544
Switzerland—Attorneys.............
1713
-•Banks..................
...1598
---Map (see Map of New Europe)............................. ...opposite 1544
Syria—Attorneys________________________________________ 1707
—Banks_____________________________________________ 1555
Table of Cardinal Numbers and Commercial Terms in ten
languages................................................................................— 17
Tahiti—Attorneys-. ...............
1708
—Banks................................... ..............................-........................1558

6

CONTENTS—(Continued)
PAGE
Taiwan (Formosa) (see Japan)
Tanganyika Territory—Banks_____________________________ 1548
—Map (see Map of Africa)_____________________ opposite 1546
Tasmania—Attorneys.-.......... ..................
.1708
—Banks........................................
...1558
Tennessee—Accessible Banking Points_______
.1927
—Attorneys......................................
..1685
—Banks.—........ .........................................
1268
—Bank Directors.....................
2256
—Laws....... ...............
1814
—Map___________ ______ _______ ______ ______ opposite 1268
—State Bankers Association, Officers______________________
9
(Members shown in Bank List by a J after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Examiners.......... ..........
13
Texas—Accessible Banking Points.............. ......................................1929
—Attorneys.._____ ____________
1687
—Banks_______
1297
—Bank Directors_________________ ____________________ 2261
—Laws______ _____ _____ _____ ______ ___ 1____________ 1817
—Map, indexed "Tex”__________________________ opposite 1296
—State Bankers Association, Officers.........................
9
—State Bank Officials and Examiners________________________ 13
(Members shown in Bank List by a j after name of bank)
Timor (see Dutch East Indies)
Togo (see French West Africa)
Total Number of Banks in the United States and Canada..opposite 33
Total Statistics for the United States........................ ........... opposite 33
Towns without banks showing nearest Accessible Points_______1859
Transvaal—Banks_________
1550
—Map (see Map of Africa)_______________________ opposite 1546
Trinidad—Attorneys. .......... ................................ .......... ...............1714
—Banks........ ...........
...1600
—Map (see Map of West Indies).................................... opposite 1598
Trust Powers (Banks having)
(Shown in Bank List by T after name of bank)
Tunisia—Attorneys________________________
1707
1548
—Banks...............................
—Map (see Map of Africa)................................... ......... opposite 1546
Turkey in Asia—Attorneys_______
1713
—Banks........... .............
1555
Turkey in Europe—Attorneys..............................
1713
—Banks__________
1599
U ganda—Attorneys_______
1707
—Banks_______
..1548
—Map (see Map of Africa)_______ ______________ opposite 1546
Union ot South Africa—Attorneys__________ ____ ___________ 1707
—Banks___ ________ ____ ________ _____ _______ _______ 1548
—Map (see Map of Africa)...................... ........................ opposite 1546
U ruguay—Attorneys..........................
1714
—Banks_______________________ ______ _____ __________ 1602
—Map (see Map of South America)..............................opposite 1598
Utah—Accessible Banking Points_____________
1933
—Attorneys..............
1692
—Banks..............
...1369
—Bank Directors_______
..2282
—Laws_____________
..1819
—Map indexed "Utah”____________ _____________ opposite 1368
—State Bankers Association, Officers...........................................
9
(Members shown in Bank List by a t after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials andExaminers______________________
13
Value of Foreign Coins___________
16
Venezuela—Attorneys______________
1714
—Banks________
1602
—Map (see Map of South America)..._____________ opposite 1600
Vermont—Accessible BankingPoints____________
.1933
—Attorneys................................................ ...................................1693
—Banks.......................
1375
..2283
—Bank Directors...............................................................
—Laws.........................
1822
—Map. indexed “Va.”.....................................................opposite 1374
—State Bankers Association,Officers............................
9

Vermont—(Continued)
PAGE
(Members shown in Bank List by X after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Examiners........ .................................... 13
Victoria—Attorneys...........................................................................1708
—Banks....... ..................................................................................1558
Virginia—Accessible Banking Points...............................................1934
—Attorneys.................
1693
—Banks................................................................... .................... 1379
—Bank Directors.........................
2284
—Laws__________
...1824
—Map indexed "Va”.............. ...................... ..................opposite 1378
—State Bankers Association, Officers_________
9
(Members shown in Bank List by t after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Examiners..._____________________13
Washington—Accessible Banking Points____ ________
1938
—Attorneys...............................................
.1695
—Banks.___ ____________________
1408
—Bank Directors_________
2292
—Laws______
1826
—Map, indexed "Wash.”.......................... ......... ............opposite 1408
—State Bankers Association, Officers................
9
(Members shown in Bank List by X after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Examiners....................... ................... 13
Western Australia—Attorneys......... ..........
1708
—Banks............................................................................ ;..........1558
West Indies—Attorneys..................
—1714
—Banks__________________
..1599
—Map....................... ...................... '________________ opposite 1598
West Virginia—Accessible Banking Points.......... ..................
1939
—Attorneys—___ ___
1697
—Banks________________________________________
1425
2296
—Bank Directors....................
—Laws........... .................
1829
—Map, indexed “ W. Va.”_______________________ opposite 1424
9
—State Bankers Association, Officers_________
(Members shown in Bank List by t after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Examiners.......................................... 13
Windward Island—Attorneys..................
1714
—Banks_____________________________________________ 1600
—Map (see Map of West Indies)........................... .........opposite 1598
Wisconsin—Accessible Banking Points................................
1942
—Attorneys__________
1698
—Banks........... .................
1443
—Bank Directors............................................
2300
—Laws.......................
...1831
—Map, indexed “ Wis.”................ .............................. .opposite 1444
—Map of Milwaukee______________________ _____ opposite 1468
—State Bankers Association, Officers___ _____
9
(Members shown in Bank List by X after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Examiners.......... ........
13
World (Map of)............ ........................................................opposite
6
Wyoming—Accessible Banking Points.................................
1944
—Attorneys..................................
1702
—Banks____ _____________
1485
—Bank Directors.....................
2312
—Laws...___________
...1834
—Map, indexed "Wyo.”.................... ....... ...................... opposite 1486
—State Bankers Association, Officers____________________
9
(Members shown in Bank List by J after name of bank)
—State Bank Officials and Examiners______
13
Yugo Slavia (See Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes)............. 1592
Yukon—Accessible Banking Points..........................
1959
—Attorneys............................................
1706
—Banks........ ......................................
1543
Zanibar Island—Attorneys_______
1707
—Banks........ ................
1551
—Map (see Map of Africa)______________________ opposite 1546

To Our Subscribers
This, the Hundredth Edition of the BANKERS BLUE BOOK, marks more than a half century of service to the
bankers of the world, and the fact that nearly all of the banks of the United States use our book is proof that the
service has met the hearty approval of the subscribers.
We assure our patrons that, as in the past, nothing will be left undone by us in our effort to give them a Directory
as nearly perfect as experience, continued vigilance, time, and money can make it.
We wish to impress our constantly increasing number of friends and patrons that the claims of this publication for
patronage are:
1.

It is honestly revised twice a year.

2. It is complete, up-to-date, and is published nearer to the date of the information it contains than is any other
similar publication.
3. It is printed in tabulated form, all similar items being placed in the same column, for the purpose of comparison
—more expensive, but more satisfactory to the user.
4.

It is beautifully printed in clear readable type.

5. It gives to advertisers a country-wide circulation, covering a majority of the best banks in America and thousands
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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

RAND M9NALLY & COMPANY

BARCLAYS BANK
LIMITED

Head Office: 54, Lombard Street, LONDON, E. C. 3.
FREDERICK CRAUFURD GOODENOUGH, Chairman
---------------------------------

($5 = £1)

AUTHORISED CAPITAL - - - - $ 100,000,000
ISSUED AND PAID-UP CAPITAL 77,961,860
RESERVE FUND.............................
41,250,000
DEPOSITS etc. (30th June, 1925) - - 1,494-,736,350
Over 1800 branches in England and Wales
Agents and Correspondents throughout the World

THE BANK IS SPECIALLY ORGANISED FOR THE REPRESENTATION
IN GREAT BRITAIN OF AMERICAN BANKS AND BANKERS
CHIEF FOREIGN BRANCH: 168 Fenchurch St., London, E. C. 3
AFFILIATED BANKS:

BARCLAYS BANK (Dominion, Colonial and Overseas)
BARCLAYS BANK (Overseas) LIMITED
THE BRITISH LINEN BANK
THE UNION BANK OF MANCHESTER LIMITED
ITALIAN AUXILIARY:

BARCLAYS BANK, S. A. L, ROME

Representative in America: H. POE ALTON, 60 Wall Street, New York, N. Y.

MIDLAND BANK LIMITED
CHAIRMAN:

The Right Hon. R. McKENNA
JOINT MANAGING DIRECTORS:

FREDERICK HYDE

Subscribed Capital
Paid-up Capital
Reserve Fund Deposits {June 30, 1925)

EDGAR W. WOOLLEY

-

-

£39,990,270
12,664,020
12,664,020
348,359,435

HEAD OFFICE: 5, THREADNEEDLE STREET, LONDON, E.C. 2
OVER 1,850 OFFICES IN ENGLAND AND WALES

OVERSEAS BRANCH: 122, OLD BROAD STREET, LONDON, E.C. 2
Atlantic Offices: “Aquitania” “Berengaria” “Mauretania”
AFFILIATED BANKS:

BELFAST BANKING COMPANY LTD.
THE CLYBESDALE BANK LTD.
NORTH OF SCOTLAND BANK LTD.


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

AUSTRALIA and NEW ZEALAND.

BANK OF NEW SOUTH WALES
(ESTABLISHED 1817.)

Paid-up Capital •
Reserve Fund
Reserve Liability of Proprietors

!§§$$*!
. 1

Aggregate Assets
30th September, 1924 -

1(7*1 vOj^l

,

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*%p5'v ^natsa^^mSr

OSCAR LINES.

,

22 000 000.00
30,000,000.00
$82,000,000.00
$370,242,892.00

General

Manager

403 BRANCHES and AGENCIES in the Australian States, New Zealand, Fiji, Papua
(New Guinea), and London. The Bank transacts every description of Australasian
Banking Business. Wool and other Produce Credits arranged.
Head Office:
GEORGE STREET, SYDNEY

London Office:
29, THREADNEEDLE STREET, E. C. 2

Protected by
Surety
Bond

The attorneys who
are listed in the
Rand MCNally
Bankers
Directory
are bonded by the
American Surety
Company.

Send Your Legal Business to Bonded Attorneys


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

NATIONAL BANK
- NEW ZEALAND

LIMITED

Authorised and Subscribed Capital
Paid Up Capital
- - Reserve Fund and Undivided Profits
DIRECTORS
HON. WILLIAM PEMBER REEVES. Chairman
HENRY F. FRESHWATER. Esq.
ROBERT LOGAN. Esq.
SIR AUSTIN E. HARRIS. K. B. E.
HON. SIR ARTHUR MYERS
LINDSAY ERIC SMITH. Esq.
JAMES B. REID. Esq.
SIR JAMES H. B. COATES (Honorary Director)

HEAD OFFICE,

CHIEF OFFICE IN
NEW ZEALAND,

8, MOORGATE,

LONDON, E. C. 2

WELLINGTON

ARTHUR WILLIS, Manager

G. W. McINTOSH, Acting General Manager

BILLS OF EXCHANGE COLLECTED
WOOL AND PRODUCE CREDITS ARRANGED
ALL CLASSES OF BANKING BUSINESS UNDERTAKEN

BRANCHES AND AGENCIES THROUGHOUT NEW ZEALAND
LONDON BANKERS
THE BANK OF ENGLAND


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

L

LLOYDS BANK. LIMITED

THE NATIONAL BANK OF SCOTLAND. LTD.


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

A Free Flowing
Non-Corroding
Blue Black
Permanent

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THE BUYER’S GUIDE

WRITE

HECO ENVELOPE CO.

ENVELOPES
FOR
BANKS

FRANK HOGAN, President

MANUFACTURERS
351-363 East Ohio Street

ACCOUNTANTS AND AUDITORS

F.W.LAFRENTZ&G0.
Formerly

#

PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS
Executive Offices:
100 Broadway, New York, N. Y.

BH^HES

WALDORF-ASTORIA, N. T.
CHICAGO
WILKES-BARRE
PHILADELPHIA
i'PT.AVT
ATLANTA
WASHINGTON. D. C.
RICHMOND
MILWAUKEE
BALTIMORE NEW ORLEANS
SCRANTON
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LONDON, ENG.

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CHICAGO

KANSAS BANK NOTE CO.
FREDONIA. KANSAS

PRINTERS, LITHOGRAPHERS
in the printing and lithographing of any and all bank
forms.
Samples and prices on application.

BANK STATIONERS

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(See also Bank Outfitters, Lithographers, Office Supplies)

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Laclede & Vandeventer Ave.

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RATES OF POSTAGE
DOMESTIC

1
1
2
3
3
4
2

EXTRA SERVICE

POSTAGE RATES

ARTICLES

CLASS

PRIVATE MAILING CARDS (written or 2 cents each.

(Letters, sealed and unsealed, are 2 cents an ounce or

Newspapers and Magazines (transient)______ 2 cents for each 2 ounces or fraction to 8 ounces inclusive_________
1 Yi cents for each 2 ounces or fraction to 8 ounces inclusive_______
Except that----Books, Catalogues (24 pages or more), Seeds,
1 cent for each 2 ounces or fraction to 8 ounces inclusive__________
Merchandise, Printed Matter, Books, Cata­
logues, Seeds, Etc., weighing more than 8
ounces to 50 or 70 pounds .. . ________ Zone or pound rates and conditions with a Service Charge of 2 cents for
each parcel, and 25 cents additional postage for parcels marked
Newspapers and Magazines (transient) weigh­
ing more than 8 ounces to 50 or 70 pounds. Zone or pound rates and conditions with a Service Charge of 2 cents for
each parcel, and 25 cents additional postage for parcels marked
“Special Handling” by the mailer.

May be Registered.
May be Registered.
May be Registered or Insured
or Sent C. 0. D.
May be Registered or Insured
or Sent C. 0. D.
May be Insured, sent C. 0. D.
and “Special Handling”+sa
as first class.

Fees on mail are in addition to the postage and are prepaid in the same manner. Mail closed against inspection, unless specially authorized, is subject to
the first class rate. Mail of the Second, Third and Fourth classes with impermissible written additions or which contain correspondence is also subject to the
first class rate of postage.

TABLE SHOWING RATES OF PARCEL POSTAGE
1st zone
rate
1st pound
.
...
$0.05
Each additional pound, lb.... ___ _________
0.0 'A
Two cents service charge additional on each parcel.

rate

2d
zone
rate

3d
zone
rate

4th
zone
rate

5th
zone
rate

6th
zone
rate

7th
zone
rate

8th
zone
rate

$0.05
0.01

$0.05
0.01

$0.06
0.02

$0.07
0.04

$0.08
0.06

$0.09
0.08

$0.11
0.10

$0.12
0.12

DOMESTIC MONEY ORDER BUSINESS
The printed application form must be used when applying for a money order. The applicant must write his or her own given name and surname in full,
and given name of the payee must be stated in full if known, otherwise initials may be used. The given name of married women must be used and not that of
their husbands. Names of places, streets, and numbers should be written in plainest manner possible.
A money order can not be made payable to more than one person or firm.
FEES FOR SPECIAL
DELIVERY
First, Second and Third Class
(Any Class of Mail)
REGISTRY FEES

First Class
15c, Indemnity to $50.
20c, over $50 to $100 Indemnity
Second Class
15c, No Indemnity.
Third Class
15c, Indemnity to $25.
Fee for registered mail of any
class of no intrinsic valueno indemnity, 15c.

C. O. D. FEES

INSURANCE FEES

Third and Fourth Class

Third and Fourth Class

5c, to $5.
12c, Collects to $10.
15c, Collects from $10.01 to
$50.
8c, over $5 to $25.
25c,, Collects from $50.01 to
$100.
10c, over $25 to $50‘.
C. O. D. parcels can be sent to
25c, over $50 to $100.
Money Order offices only.
Amountof collection and money
order fee for return must be
Return Receipts for Regis­ entered separately and to­
tered and Insured Mail, 3c i.at taled on the C. 0. D. tag
sender’s request).
and the parcel.
Includes insurance.

10c, to 2 pounds (inclusive)15c, over 2 pounds to 10
pounds (inclusive).
20c, over 10 pounds to 50 or
70 pounds (inclusive).

DOMESTIC MONEY
ORDER FEES
5c,
7c,
10c,
12c,
15c,
18c,
20c,
22c,

.
$ 2.51
5.01
10.01
20.01
40.01
60.01
80.01

to $ 2.50.
5.00.
to
to 10.00.
to 20.00.
to 40.00.
to 60.00.
to 80.00.
to 100.00.

FOREIGN POSTAL TABLE
The rate of postage upon letters to foreign countries is five cents for the first ounce or fraction of an ounce, and three cents for each additional ounce or
fraction of an ounce, excepting the following named countries. To these countries and places letters may be sent at the rate of two cents an ounce or fraction
thereof.
Argentina
Canary Islands
Guatemala
Newfoundland
Trinidad
Bahamas
Colombia
Haiti
New Zealand
(including Tobago)
Balearic Islands
Costa Rica
Honduras
Nicaragua
Uruguay
Bolivia
Cuba
Ireland
Paraguay
Wales
Barbados
Curacao
Jamaica
Peru
Windward Islands (including GrenBrazil
Dominican Republic
Labrador
Republic of Panama
ada, St. Vincent, Grenadines, and
British Guiana
Dutch West Indies
Leeward Islands
Salvador
St. Lucia)
British Honduras
Ecuador
Morocco
Scotland
Canada
England
Mexico
Spain
The rates on other than letters to all foreign countries are: Single postal cards, each, 2 cents double postal cards, each, 4 cents newspaper and other printed
matter, for each two ounces or fraction thereof, 1 cent. Commercial Papers.—Packets not in excess of 10 oz., 5 cents packets in excess of 10 oz„ for each 2 oz.
or fraction thereof additional, 1 cent. Samples of Merchandise.—Packets not in excess of 4 oz., 2 cents packets in excess of 4 oz., for each 2 oz. or fraction
thereof additional, 1 cent. Merchandise sent on order or as a gift must be sent by Parcel Post (note below) or is subject to letter postage, which must be fully
prepaid. Registration fee on letters or other articles, 10 cents. Ordinary letters for any foreign country (except Canada and Mexico) will be forwarded, whether
any postage is prepaid on them or not. Foreign mail should be fully prepaid, as double the amount of deficient postage is collected before delivery in countries
of destination. All other mailable matter must be prepaid at least partially. Limit of weight for printed matter, 4 lbs., 6 oz.
To the following countries the limit is 8 lbs., 12 oz.: Argentina, Balearic Islands, Bolivia, Brazil, Canary Islands, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominican
Republic, Ecuador, Mexico, Paraguay, Peru, Salvador, Spain, Uruguay.
Limit of weight on single-volume books is 6 lbs., 9 oz., except to Cuba, Mexico, Panama and Salvador, where there is no limit. To Argentina, Balearic
Islands, Bolivia, Brazil, Canada, Canary Islands, Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Paraguay, Peru, Spain, Uruguay, the limit of weight is
11 lbs.

FOREIGN PARCEL POST RATES
Fourteen cents per pound or fractions thereof. To many countries there is an additional transit rate. Parcels may be registered to certain countries.
Eleven pounds is the limit to foreign points including Canada, named in United States Postal Guide except: the limit of weight on Foreign Parcel Post is
twenty-two pounds to the following countries and their possessions: Algeria, Alsace Lorraine, Argentine, Austria, Belgium, Czecho-Slovakia, Brazil, Bulgaria,
China, Colombia, Costa Rica, Denmark, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Esthonia, Finland, France, Germany, Guatemala, Greenland, Haiti, Honduras, Latvia,
Lithuania, Luxemburg, Memel, Mexico, Monaco, Nicaragua, Norway, Paraguay, Peru, Poland, Roumania, Russia, Salvadore, Sweden, Switzerland, Uruguay,
Yugoslavia. Fifty pounds to Panama, and Shanghai, China 4 lbs., 6 oz. to Cuba.
All parcel post shipments to Cuba, Peru, Guatemala, and Chili must be accompanied by an invoice vised at the nearest consulate of the respective countries.
Limited to three and one-half feet in length and to six feet in length and girth combined. Please note, however, that there are certain countries to which
packages cannot be sent by parcel post. Your local post office should be consulted. Special delivery 20 cents additional. All countries, require declaration
showing contents and-value.
A Postal Export Declaration must accompany all parcels valued at $25.00 or over, to all foreign countries including the U. S. possessions.
Sealed parcels to Gt. Britain and Northern Ireland may be insured.

INTERNATIONAL MONEY ORDERS
Money orders can be issued between the United States and fifty-eight countries, rates differing and subject to change. See your Postmaster for latest rates.

RATES FOR EXPRESS MONEY ORDERS
Not over $2.50........... 6c
Over $2.50 to $5.00. _.8c
Over $5.00 to $10.00.10c


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

Over $10.00 to $20.00...12c
Over $20.00 to $40.00...15c
Over $40.00 to $60.00...I8c

7

Over $60.00 to $ 80.00...20c
Over $80.00 to $100.00..,24c

BANKERS’ ASSOCIATIONS, 1926
AMERICAN BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION
President, Oscar Wells, president First National Bank, Birmingham.
First Vice-President, Melvin A. Traylor, president First Trust and Savings
Bank, Chicago, Ill.
Second Vice-President, Thomas R. Preston, president Hamilton National
Bank, Chattanooga, Tenn.
Executive Manager, F. N. Shepherd, 110 East 42d St., New York City.
Treasurer, Nathan D. Prince, president Hartford Connecticut Trust Co.,
Hartford, Conn.
General Counsel, Thomas B. Paton, 110 East 42d St., New York City.
Secretary and Asst. Treasurer, William G. Fitzwilson, 110 East 42d St.,
New York City.
Deputy Managers: Trust Company Division, L. A. Mershon; Savings
Bank Division, W. Espey Albig; National Bank Division, E. E. Mountjoy; State Bank Division, F. W. Simmonds. Protective Department,
James E. Baum, 110 E. 42d St., New York, N. Y.
Editor of the Journal, Jas. E. Clark, 110 East 42d St., New York City.
Branch Office, 708 Colorado Bldg., Washington, D. C.
ALABAMA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION
President, D. P. Bestor. Jr., president First National Bank, Mobile.
Vice-President, S. C. King, vice-president Bank of Ensley, Ensley.
Secretary and 't reasurer, Henry T. Bartlett, vice-president American Trust
& Savings Bank, Birmingham.
ARIZONA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION
President, K. L. Hart, vice-president Southern Arizona Bank and Trust
Company, Tucson.
Vice-President, A. M. Gillespie, president Nogales National Bank, Nogales.
Secretary, Morris Goldwater, president Commercial Trust & Savings
Bank, Prescott.
Treasurer, J. R. Todd, vice-president The Valley Bank. Phoenix.
ARKANSAS BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION
President, W. H. Johnson, vice-president Merchants National Bank, Fort
Smith.
Vice-President, J. D. Wells, cashier Randolph County Bank, Pocahontas.
Secretary, Robt. E. Wait, Little Rock.
Treasurer, Walter S. Pettit, cashier Citizens National Bank, Harrison.
CALIFORNIA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION
President, J. E. Huntoon, president Peoples Bank, Sacramento.
Vice-President, W. E. Wilcox, vice-president and cashier, Anglo and
London Paris National Bank, San Francisco.
Secretary, Frederick II. Colburn, 628 Mills Bldg., San Francisco.
Treasurer, C. L. Smith, assistant vice-president Anglo California Trust
Co., San Francisco.
CANADIAN BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION
President, C. E. Neill, general manager of The Royal Bank of Canada,
Montreal, Que.
Secretary-Treasurer, Henry T. Ross, Dominion Express Building, Montreal,
Que.
COLORADO BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION
President, R. W. Joslyn, vice-president Mercantile Bank & Trust Co.,
Boulder.
Vice-President, M. A. Crissman, cashier First National Bank. Paonia.
Secretary, L. F. Scarboro, editor and publisher, Mountain States Banker,
Denver.
Treasurer, F. A. Bullock, president First National Bank, Arvada.
CONNECTICUT BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION
President, R. E. Chambers, cashier Ansonia National Bank, Ansonia.
Vice-President, R. E. Herman, vice-president Mechanics Bank, New Haven.
Secretary, Chas. E. Hoyt, treasurer So. Norwalk Tr. Co., So. Norwalk.
Treasurer, F. M. Cowles, cashier First National Bank, Wallingford.
DELAWARE BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION
President, Haldeman C. Stout, vice-president Industrial Trust Co., Wil­
mington.
Vice-President, Thomas R. Ingram, cashier Sussex Trust Co , Lewes, Del.
Secretary and Treasurer, Warren K. Ayres, assistant treasurer Wilmington
Trust Company, Wilmington.
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION
President, F. G. Addison, Jr., vice-president Security Savings & Commercial
Bank, Washington.
First Vice-President, Howard Moran, vice-president American Security &
Trust Co., Washington.
Second Vice-President, W. W. Spaid, W. B. Hibbs & Co., Washington.
Secretary, Robert V. Fleming, president Riggs National Bank, Washington.
Treasurer, A. S. Gatley, vice-president and cashier, Lincoln National Bank,
Washington.
Assistant Secretary, Miss Grace M. Bromley, 13th St. and New York Ave.,
Washington.
Counsel, Frank J. Hogan, Washington.
FLORIDA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION
President, W. R. McQuaid, president Barnett National Bank, JacksonvilleVice-President, J. H. Therrell, president Commercial Bank, Ocala.
Secretary and Treasurer, W. O. Boozer, vice-president Atlantic National
Bank, Jacksonville.
GEORGIA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION
President, C. E. Martin, vice-president Citizens Bank, Fort Valley.
Vice-President, Abial Winn, vice-president First National Bank. Valdosta.
Secretary, Haynes McFadden, Suite 707-101 Marietta St., Atlanta.
Treasurer, E. L. Henderson, cashier Commercial Bank, Cedartown.
General Counsel. Orville A. Park, Macon.

KANSAS BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION
President, George A. Rogers, president Abilene National Bank, Abilene.
Vice-President, W. M. Price, president Lyon County State Bank, Emporia.
Secretary, W. W. Bowman, Topeka.
Assistant Secretary, Fred M. Bowman, Topeka.
Office Secretary, Eleanor Woodburn, Topeka.
Treasurer. G. W. Nimocks, president Bank of Scandia, Scandia.
KENTUCKY BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION
President. N. H. Dosker, vice-president National Bank of Kentucky,
Louisville.
Secretary, Harry G. Smith. 300 Louisville National Bank Bldg., Louisville.
Treasurer, A. J. Emerine, cashier Citizens Bank, Carrsville.
LOUISIANA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION
President, Travis Oliver, president Contral Savings Bank & Trust Co.,
Monroe.
Vice-President, W. P. Connell, President Louisiana National Bank, Baton
Rouge.
Secretary, J. C. Barry, executive vice -president Bank of Lafayette & Trust
Co., Lafayette.
Treasurer, W. M. Mitchell, vice-president Canal-Commercial Trust &
Savings Bank, New Orleans.
MAINE BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION
President, C. A. Weber, cashier First National Bank, Portland.
Vice-President, F. L. Palmer, vice-president Fidelity Trust Company,
Portland.
Vice-President, Ralph Whittier, treasurer Penobscot Savings Bank, Bangor.
Secretary, E. S. Kennard, vice-president Rumford National Bank, Rumford.
Treasurer, G. A. Safford, secretary-treasurer Hallowell Trust & Banking
Co., Hallowell.
MARYLAND BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION
President, Homer D. Baker, president Citizens National Bank, Frederick.
Secretary, Charles Hann, Merchants National Bank, Baltimore.
Treasurer, Wm. Marriott, cashier Western National Bank, Baltimore.
MASSACHUSETTS BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION
President, Arthur B. Chapin, vice-president American Trust Co., Boston.
Vice-President, Myron F. Converse, Treasurer Worcester Five Cents Sav­
ings Bank, Worcester.
Secretary, George W. Hyde, vice-president First National Bank, Boston.
Treasurer, J. II. Gifford, vice-president Merchants National Bank, Salem.
MICHIGAN BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION
President. Fred S. Case, vice-president and cashier First National Bank,
Sault Ste. Marie.
First Vice-President, Gus Hid, president First National Bank, Port Huron.
Second Vice-president, E. R. Morton, vice-president and cashier City
National Bank, Battle Creek.
Secretary, Mrs. H. M. Brown, 723 Ford Bldg.. Detroit.
Treasurer, Frank W. Merrick, vice-president Pigeon State Bank, Pigeon.
MINNESOTA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION
President, J. J. Maloney, cashier Farmers State Bank, Heron Lake.
Vice-President, R. E. Macgregor, vice-president Northwestern National
Bank, Minneapolis.
Secretary, F. P. Fellows, 718 National Building, Minneapolis.
Treasurer, J. K. Martin, cashier First National Bank, Little Fads.
MISSISSIPPI BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION
President, J. B. Stirling, president First National Bank, Jackson.
Vice-President, O. B. Taylor, vice-president Merchants Bank and Trust
Co., Jackson.
Secretary, George B. Power, Capital National Bank Bldg., Jackson.
Treasurer, N. H. Crenshaw, cashier First National Bank, Jackson.
MISSOURI BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION
President, E. E. Amick, vice-president First National Bank, Kansas City.
Vice-President, W. W. Pollock, president North Missouri Trust Co., Mexico.
Secretary, W. F. Keyser, Sedalia.
Assistant Secretary, E. P. Neef, Sedalia.
Treasurer, Edward Buder, vice-president and treasurer Mercantile Trust
Co., St. Louis.
MONTANA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION
President, Chas. Vandenhook, vice-president, Commercial National Bank,
Bozeman.
Vice-President, J. K. Heslet, assistant cashier W. A. Clark & Brother,
Bkrs., Butte.
Secretary-Treasurer, John Romersa, Helena.
NEBRASKA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION
President, I. R. Alter, vice-president First National Bank, Grand Island.
Chairman Executive Council, P. L. Had, Jr., cashier Greenwood State Bank.
Greenwood.
Secretary, William B. Hughes, 908 W. O. W. Bldg., Omaha.
Treasurer, F. W. Thomas, vice-president First National Bank, Omaha.
General Counsel, J. P. Palmer, 306 Peters Trust Bldg., Omaha.
NEVADA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION
President, E. E. Ennor, cashier First National Bank, Elko.
Vice-President, C. W. Mapes, president Washoe County Bank, Reno.
Secretary, L. S. Reese, assistant cashier Farmers and Merchants National
Bank, Reno.
Treasurer, George F. Willis, cashier Lyon County Bank, Yerington.

COUNTRY BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION OF GEORGIA
President, R. B. Dixon, president Citizens Bank, West Point.
First vice-president, C. E. Martin, vice-president Citizens Bank, Fort Valley.
Second Vice-President, M. L. Lee, cashier Moultrie Banking Co., Moultrie.
Secretary and Treasurer, L. R. Adams, vice-president Georgia State Bank,
Atlanta.
General Counsel, Alex. W. Smith, Jr., Atlanta.
IDAHO BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION
President, J. S. Bussell, president Citizens Bank & Trust Co., Pocatello.
Vice-President, A. V. Chamberlin, vice-president American Trust Co.,
Coeur d’Alene.
Secretary, J. S. St. Clair, vice-president Boise City National Bank, Boise.
Treasurer, Guy H. Shearer, president First National Bank, Filer.
ILLINOIS BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION
President, C. W. Boyden, vice-president Farmers State Bank, Sheffield.
Vice-President, W. B. Crawford, vice-president West Frankfort Bank &
Trust Co., West Frankfort.
Secretary, M. A. Graettinger, 208 S. La Salle St., Chicago.
Treasurer, John H. Grier, assistant cashier First Trust and Savings Bank,
Chicago.
Assistant Secretary, Olive S. Jennings, 208 S. La Salle St., Chicago.
INDIANA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION
President, R. C. Stephenson, president Saint Joseph Loan and Trust
F
Company, South Bend.
Vice-President, HugoC.Rothert, president Huntingburg Bank.Huntingburg,
Secretary, Forba McDaniel, 310 Odd Fellow Bldg., Indianapolis.
Treasurer, J. C. Haskett, cashier Henry County Bank, Spiceland.
IOWA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION
President, Emil Webbies, president First Iowa State Trust and Savings
Bank, Burlington.
Vice-President, C. C. Jacobsen, president First State Bank, Mapleton.
Secretary, Frank Warner, 430 Liberty Bldg., Des Moines.
Treasurer, A. E. Hindorff, cashier Jasper County Savings Bank, Newton.


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

NEW HAMPSHIRE BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION
President, W. H. McCarten, cashier, Lancaster National Bank, Lancaster.
Secretary, Harry L. Additon, vice-president and cashier Merchants National
Bank, Manchester.
Treasurer, R. H. Spaulding, cashier Pemigewasset National Bank, Plymouth.
NEW JERSEY BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION
President, Frank C. Ferguson, president Union Trust-Hudson County
National Bank, Jersey City.
Vice-President, Walter E. Robb, president Burlington City Loan and Trust
Co., Burlington.
Secretary, Wm. J. Field, president Commercial Trust Company of New
Jersey, Jersey City.
Treasurer, F. Morse Archer, president First National State Bank, Camden.
NEW MEXICO BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION
President, L. C. Becker, cashier First National Bank, Belen.
Vice-President, E. A. Brickley. cashier First National Bank, Carrizozo.
Secretary, Mrs. Margaret F. Barnes, 724 First National Bank Bldg., Albu­
querque.
Treasurer, Ernst Ruth, cashier National Bank of New Mexico, Raton.
NEW YORK STATE BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION
President, W. S. Irish, vice-president First National Bank, Brooklyn.
Vice-President, Carleton A. Chase, president, First Trust and Deposit Co.,
Syracuse.
Secretary, Edward J. Gallien, 128 Broadway, New York City.
Treasurer, Frank E. Storms, president, Citizens National Bank, Hornell.
8

BANKERS’ ASSOCIATIONS, 1926—Continued
SAVINGS BANK ASSOCIATION OF THE STATE OF
NEW YORK

President, George D. Sears, secretary Buffalo Savings Bank. Buffalo.
Vice-President, Roy C. Van Denbergii, vice-president Savings Bank of
Utica, Utica.
Vice-President, Philip A. Benson, secretary Dime Savings Bank of Brooklyn,
Brooklyn.
Vice-President, Frederic B. Stevens, president National Savings Bank,
Albany.
Vice-President, Lewis B. Gawtry, vice-president Bank for Savings, New
York City.
General Secretary, Paul W. Albright, 110 E. 42d St., New York City.
Treasurer, 'William M. Campbell, president American Savings Bank, New
York City.
Counsel, Eugene Lamb Richards, trustee Empire City Savings Bank, New
York City.
NORTH CAROLINA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION

President, Thomas H. Shipman, president Brevard Banking Company,
Brevard.
Vice-President, Frank F. Fagan, vice-president and cashier, First National
Bank, Rocky Mount.
Vice-President. E. E. Jones, cashier Independence Trust Co., Charlotte.
Vice-President, W. G. Gaither, vice-president First & Citizens National
Bank, Elizabeth City.
Secretary, Paul P. Brown, Raleigh.
Treasurer, H. G. Kramer, cashier Savings Bank and Trust Co., Elizabeth
City.
General Counsel, Willis Smith, Raleigh.
NORTH DAKOTA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION

President, Ed. Pierce, president Ransom County Trust Co., Sheldon.
Vice-President and Chairman Ex. Council, H. T. Graves, president James
River National Bank, Jamestown.
Secretary, W. C. Macfadden, .54 Broadway, Fargo.
Treasurer, J. E. Davis, president Citizens State Bank, Goodrich.

SOUTH DAKOTA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION

President, D. H. Lightner, cashier Citizens Trust & Savings Bank, Aberdeen.
Vice-President, Arthur Chambers, vice-president Hudson State Bank,
Hudson.
Secretary, George A. Starring, City Hall Building, Huron, S. Dak.
Treasurer, John Barton, cashier Security National Bank, Sioux Falls.
TENNESSEE BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION

President, E. L. Rice, vice-president Bank of Commerce & Trust Co.
Memphis.
Vice-President, A. D. Brockman, cashier First National Bank, Kingsport.
Vice-President, J. F. Eggleston, president Williamson County Banking &
Trust Co., Franklin.
Vice-President, W. R. Miller, President Ripley Savings Bank & Trust Co.
Ripley.
Secretary, H. G. Huddleston, 1015-1016 Independent Life Bldg., Nashville.
Treasurer, Jas. H. Moran, president The Dresden Bank, Dresden.
TEXAS BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION

President, Francis H. Welch, president First National Bank, Taylor.
Secretary, W. A. Philpott, Jr., Dallas.
Treasurer, Owen W. Sherrill, president City National Bank, Georgetown.
UTAH BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION

President, W. W. Armstrong, president National Copper Bank, Salt Lake
City.
First Vice-president, Jas. M. Peterson, president James M. Peterson Bank,
Richfield.
Second Vice President, A Sonne, cashier First National Bank of Logan,
Logan.
Secretary and Treasurer, Carl R. Marcusen, cashier Price Commercial &
Savings Bank. Price.

OHIO BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION

VERMONT BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION

President, W. R. Green, vice-president The Guardian Savings and Trust
Co., Cleveland.
Vice-President, Wm. A. Ackerman, vice-president. The Knox National
Bank, Mb. Vernon.
Secretary, 8. a. Roach, Huntington Bank Bldg., Columbus.
Asst. Secretary, G. E. Howard, Huntington Bank Bldg., Columbus.
Treasurer, H. M. Davies, vice-president and cashier The Commercial Bank,
Delphos.

President, J. E. McCarten, president National Bank of Newport, Newport.
Vice President, A. B. Noyes, president, Passumpsic Savings Bank, St.
Johnsbury.
Secretary, C. S. Webster, treasurer Barton Savings Bank & Trust Co.
Barton.
Treasurer. L. A. Neal, cashier Bradford National Bank. Bradford.

OKLAHOMA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION

President, S. L. Morley, president American National Bank, McAlester.
Vice-President, E. D. Kilpatrick, cashier First State Bank, Le Flore.
Secretary, Eugene P. Gum, Oklahoma City.
Assistant Secretary. Gertrude Corbitt, Oklahoma City.
Treasurer, Jake Easton, vice-president Exchange National Bank, Tulsa.
Chm. executive committee, G. S. Weitzenhoffer, vice-president Security
National Bank, Oklahoma City.
OREGON BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION

President, J. W. McCoy, cashier First National Bank, Ashland.
\ ice-President, Jas. E. Montgomery, President Bank of Southwestern
Oregon, Marshfield.
Treasurer, J. L. Gault, vice-president and cashier Benton County State
Bank, Corvallis.
Secretary, Andrew Miller, Porter Bldg., Portland.

«
VIRGINIA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION

President, Walker Scott, vice-president Virginia Trust Co., Richmond.
Vice-President, M. G. Field, president National Bank of Orange, Orange.
Secretary, W. F. Augustine, vice-president Merchants National Bank,
Richmond.
Assistant Secretary, Harry Frazier, Jr., member of Firm Frederick E.
Nolting & Co., Richmond
Treasurer, Scott Irby, vice-president and cashier Bank of Lunenburg
Kenbridge.
WASHINGTON BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION

President, H. W. MacPhail, president Willapa Harbor State Bank.Raymond.
Vice-President, Guy C. Browne, president Columbia ValleyBank,Wenatchee.
Secretary, Wm. Hatch Davis, 1016 Old National Bank, Spokane.
Treasurer, Benj. H. Phillips, vice-president First National Bank, Port
Angelus.

PENNSYLVANIA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION

President, George W. Reily, president Harrisburg Trust Co., Harrisburg.
Vice-President, Clark Hammond, vice-president Columbia National Bank,
Pittsburgh.
Secretary, C. F. Zimmerman, treasurer Lebanon County Trust Co., Lebanon.
Treasurer, P. T. Davis, treasurer Clearfield Trust Co., Clearfield.

WEST VIRGINIA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION

President, W. C. Given, cashier Commercial Bank, Bluefleld.
Vice-President, M. A. Fletcher, treasurer Fairmont Trust Co., Fairmont.
Secretary, Joseph S. Hill, vice-president Capital City Bank, Charleston
Treasurer, Louis J. Yaeger, Asst, cashier National Exchange Bank, Wheeling

RHODE ISLAND BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION

President, Walter F. Farrell, vice-president Union Trust Co., Providence.
\ ice-President, John H. Wells, vice-president R. I. Hospital Trust Co.,
Jrroviaence.
Secretary, Edward A. Havens, vice-president Mechanics National Bank
Providence.
Treasurer, W. Howard Perry, cashier National Bank of Commerce, ProviSOUTH CAROLINA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION

President, H. D. Calhoun, president Home Bank, Barnwell
V ice-President, G. W. Duvall, president The Bank of Cheraw, Cheraw, S. C.
Secretary and Treasurer, Henry S. Johnson,, Columbia.
Attorney, B. H. Moss, president Edisto National Bank, Orangeburg.


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

WISCONSIN BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION

President, L. Albert Karel, president State Bank of Kewaunee, Kewaunee.
Vice-President, Knute Anderson, cashier Union National Bank, Eau Claire.
Secretary, Wall G. Coapman, 717 Caswell Block, Milwaukee.
Treasurer, H. Ilaslett, cashier Citizens State Bank, Loyal.
WYOMING BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION

President, F. H. Healy, president Encampment State Bank, Encampment.
Vice-President, Wm. C. Henderson, cashier First National Bank, Sheridan.
Secretary, Harry B. Henderson, Cheyenne.
Treasurer, Carl R. Shumaker, cashier Wyoming National Bank, Casper.

ADDITIONAL BANKERS’ ASSOCIATIONS
INVESTMENT BANKERS ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA
Office of the Secretary, 105 South La Salle Street, Chicago

OFFICERS AND BOARD OF GOVERNORS
1925-1926
PRESIDENT
RAY MORRIS..................................Brown Brothers & Co......................................................................................................................................................^e'

VICE-PRESIDENTS
ARTHUR H. GILBERT............. Spencer Trask & Co..............................................................................
PLINY JEWELL............................ Coffin & Burr, Inc..................................................................................
JOHN W. MACGREGOR.......... Glover & MacGregor............................................................................
TOM K. SMITH.............................Kauffman, Smith & Co., Inc..............................................................
ELI T. WATSON............................Watson, Williams & Co.......................................................................

Chicago
Boston
Pittsburgh
St. Louis
New Orleans

EXECUTIVE SECRETARY
Chicago

FREDERICK R. FENTON.... 105 S. La Salle Street

ASSISTANT SECRETARY
CLAYTON G. SC1IRAY

105 S. La Salle Street..............................................................................

TREASURER
FRANK M. GORDON.................First Trust & Savings Bank...................................................

GOVERNORS
GEORGE WHITNEY...................J. P. Morgan & Co.................................................................
JOSEPH R. SWAN........................ Guaranty Company of New York...................................
CLARKSON POTTER................. Hayden, Stone & Co..............................................................
B. A. TOMPKINS..........................Bankers Trust Co....................................................................
HENRY R. HAYES...................... Stone & Webster, Inc............................................................
GEORGE B. CALDWELL......... 100 Broadway..........................................................................
WALTER S. BREWSTER......... Russell, Brewster & Co.........................................................
ROBERT STEVENSON, Jr.. . .Stevenson, Perry, Stacy & Co..........................................
HENRY C. OLCOTT................... Continental and Commercial Trust & Savings Bank
CARROLL J. WADDELL..........Drexel & Co..............................................................................
RICHARD E. NORTON............ W. H. Newbold’s Son & Co................................................
FRANK D. NICOL....................... Nicol, Ford & Co....................................................................
R. A. WILBUR................................The Herrick Co........................................................................
THOMAS N. DYSART............... Knight, Dysart & Gamble..................................................
ALDEN H. LITTLE..................... Little & Moore, Inc................................................................
MAX O. WHITING......................Harris, Forbes & Co., Inc....................................................
JOHN P. BAER.............................. John P. Baer & Co.................................................................
GEORGE A. COLSTON.............. Colston, Heald & Trail........................................................
ROBERT H. MOULTON............R. H. Moulton & Co.............................................................
JOHN E. JARDINE..................... Wm. R. Staats Co...................................................................
CHARLES R. BLYTH.................Blyth, Witter & Co................................................................
BENJAMIN H. DIBBLEE........B. H. Rollins & Sons.............................................................
HUGH W. GROVE........................First Wisconsin Co.................................................................
EDGAR FRIEDLANDER..........328)4 Walnut Street.............................................................
J. H. GUNDY.................................. Wood, Gundy & Co...............................................................
SIGMUND STERN....................... Stern Brothers & Co..............................................................
WILLIS K. CLARK...................... Geo. H. Burr, Conrad & Broom, Inc..............................
CHARLES T. SIDLO................... Sidlo, Simons. Day & Co.....................................................
C. O. KALMAN.............................. Kalman, Gates, White & Co...............................................
JOEL E. FERRIS........................... Ferris & Hardgrove...............................................................

Chicago

Chicago

New York
New York
New York
.New York
New York
New York
. Chicago
Chicago
Chicago
. Philadelphia
, Philadelphia
. Detroit
, Cleveland
.St. Louis
. St. Louis
. Boston
. Baltimore
. Baltimore
. Los Angeles
. Los Angeles
. San Francisco
. San Francisco
.Milwaukee
. Cincinnati
. Toronto
. Kansas City
. Portland, Ore.
. Denver
.St. Paul
.Spokane

EDUCATIONAL DIRECTOR
Samuel O. Rice, 105 South La Salle Street, Chicago.

DIRECTOR OF PUBLICITY
Harry Rascovar, 14 Stone Street, New York.

OFFICIAL REPORTER
Frederick H. Gurtler, 69 West Washington Street, Chicago.

OFFICE COUNSEL
Theodore S. Chapman, 111 West Monroe Street, Chicago.

COMMITTEE COUNSEL
Paul V. Keyser, Woodward Building, Washington.

FARM MORTGAGE BANKERS ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA
Offices of Secretary-Treasurer, 112 W. Adams St., Chicago
E. D. Chassell, Secretary-Treasurer

OFFICERS
President, George F. Heindel, Phoenix Trust Co., Ottumwa, Iowa.
Vice-President, C, C. Bennett, Western Securities Investment Co., Denver, Colo.
Vice-President, E. L. Cralle, Atkinson, Warren & Henley Co., Oklahoma City, Okla.

BOARD OF GOVERNORS
1926
C. B. Merriam, Central Trust Co., Topeka, Kans.
A. Y. Creager, A. Y. Creager Co., Sherman, Texas.
B. S. Beachy, Peoples Trust Co., Kansas City, Mo.
E. E. Murrey, American Trust Co., Nashville, Tenn.
F. W. Koneman, Citizens Investment Co., Sioux Falls, S. Dak.
R. R. Rogers, Vermont Loan & Trust Co., Spokane Wash.

H. J. Curry, Pearsons-Taft Co., Chicago, Ill.
E. D. Schumacher, Southern Bond & Mortgage Co., Richmond, Va.
F. C. Waples, Midland Mortgage Co., Cedar Rapids, Iowa.
A. Siihring, Dime Savings & Trust Co., Peoria, Ill.
W. M. Leonard, 922 Terminal Building, Lincoln, Neb.
E. R. Tennant, Dallas Trust and Savings Bank, Dallas, Texas.


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

10


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

Save Money On Your Addressing
We keep an accurate, up-to-date addressograph list
of all the banks in the United States, corrected
weekly. This list is at your service. If we can
address your circulars, envelopes, fill in letters or
“pull a proof” of it, you can have the service at
a reasonable price and be assured that there will
be no “come back” mail. Every name is live,
active and kept so by careful attention.
If interested we should be glad to hear from you
and to quote prices and give other information.

Write to Addressing section of

Ran© WSasjx a Company
536 S. Clark Street, Chicago

INDEX
Prefix Numbers

CITIES

,

1 New York, N.Y.
2 Chicago, Ill.
3 Philadelphia,Pa.
4 St. Louis, . Mo.
5 Boston, Mass.
6 Cleveland. Ohio
7 Baltimore, Md.
8 Pittsburgh ,Pa.
9 Detroit, Mich.
10 Buffalo. N. Y.
11 San Francisco,
Cal.
12 Milwaukee, Wis.
13 Cincinnati, Ohio
14 New Orleans,La.
15 Washington,
D. C.
16 Los Angeles,
Cal.
17 Minneapolis,
Minn.
18 Kansas City,
Mo.
19 Seattle, Wash.
20 Indianapolis,
Ind.
21 Louisville, Ky.
22 St. Paul, Minn.
23 Denver. Colo.
24 Portland, Ore..
25 Columbus, Ohio
26 Memphis, Tenn.
27 Omaha, Neb.
28 Spokane, Wash.
29 Albany. N. Y.
30 San Antonio,
Tex.
31 Salt Lake City,
Utah
32 Dallas, Tex.
33 Des Moines, la.
34 Tacoma, Wash.
35 Houston. Tex.
36 St. Joseph, Mo.
37 Ft. Worth, Tex.
38 Savannah, Ga.
39 Oklahoma City,
Okla.
40 Wichita, Kan.
41 Sioux City, la.
42 Pueblo. Colo.
43 Lincoln, Neb.
44 Topeka, Kan.
45 Dubuque, la.
46 Galveston, Tex.
47 Cedar Rapids,
la.
48 Waco, Tex.
49 Muskogee, Okla.

LIBRARY
PASTE
Sticks Quickest
Is the Most
Reliable
Keeps Clean
Never Spoils

ft
TO

STATES
50 New York
51 Connecticut
52 Maine
53 Massachusetts
54 New Hampshire
55 New Jersey
56 Ohio
57 Rhode Island
58 Vermont
59 _ ........................
60 Pennsylvania
61 Alabama
62 Delaware
63 Florida
64 Georgia
65 Maryland
66 North Carolina
67 South Carolina
68 Virginia
69 West Virginia
70 Illinois
71 Indiana
72 Iowa
73 Kentucky
74 Michigan
75 Minnesota
76 Nebraska
77 North Dakota
78 South Dakota
79 Wisconsin
80 Missouri
81 Arkansas
82 Colorado
83. Kansas
84 Louisiana
85 Mississippi
86 Oklahoma
87 Tennessee
88 Texas
gC)

90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99

**

to
>

Ci TO

§.&

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8|
S*
TO ^

ft

3

Sr ”n

O

§ r0
O
CO

.........................................

California
Arizona
Idaho
Montana
Nevada
New Mexico
Oregon
Utah
Washington
Wyoming


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

WASHINGTON, D. C.

See Back of Washington, D. C. Map

J

COMPTROLLER’S CALLS
TO THE NATIONAL BANKS
FROM SEPTEMBER 9, 1886, TO DATE
YEAR

1886
1887
1888
1889
1890
1891
1892
1893
1894
1895
1896
1897
1898
1899
1900
1901
1902
1903
1904
1905
1906
1907
1908
1909
1910
1911
1912
1913
1914*
1915*
1916*
1917*
1918*
1919*
1920*
1921
1922
1923
1924
1925

JAN.

FEB.

MAR.

F
4
T
14
T
26
F
28
M
26

APR.

M
30 76

69

79
69

W
28 71
T
5 76
F
28 77
T
9 82

F
22
W
11
M
39
S
26

65
W
5 60
Th
26 72
W
24 78
W
30 74
Th
9 62

65
73
54
77
73
M
28 66
T
14 62

66
62

F
14 73
F
5 70
M
31 76
S
7 58

Th
18 58
F
4 59
W
4
Th
4
T
7
M
5
M
4
T
4

T
13 84

50
S
1
M
1
T
1
F
10
M
12
T
4

63
67
68
63
63

S
28 59
M
21 54

58
55
57
67
69
66

Th
28 66
F
10 69

F
5 56
T
3 95

M
31 91
M
6 96

S
28 79
T
6 84
T
5 74
68
69
68
77
61
92
89

F
25 88
M
18 73

W
28 82

T
20 77
T
4 70

T
3 83
T
2 76

T
20
Th
7
W
5
M
30
M
15
W
9
T
6

T
4 78

T
25
T
17
Th
10
Th
9
M
12

71
69
65
76
69

Th
22 94
W
15 62
W
23 56
Th
30 93
W
7 92
F
14 57
W
4 61
T
30 118
W
23 53
F
30 60
W
20 50
S
29 50
M
30 49
W
30 57
Th
30 63
F
30 56
S
30 88
M
30 91
T
30 85

T
3 103
W
23 70
W
1 70
Th
1 62
F
1 86
W
4 82

S
9

DEC.
T
28 82
W
7 63
W
12 69
W
11 72
F
19 78
W
2 68
F
9 70
T
19 77
W
19 78
F
13 76
Th
17 72
W
15 71
Th
1 72
S
2 86
Th
13 99
T
10 71

Th
2 76

T
9 61
Th
9 73

M
20 59
Th
14 90

NOV.

F
25 78
F
30 80

M
15 82
W
16 77

T
29 57
T
7 59

OCT.
Th
7
W
5 65
Th
4 96

M
30 80

F
30 86
F
29 64

67

F
22 55

75

F
12 60
F
18 62
Th
9 66
T
12 56
W
12 69
W
18 75
Th
11 65
T
14 68
F
23 70
Th
14 70

M
29 76
F
6

81

SEP.

S
30 61
M
13 76
S
17 78
M
4 67
T
17 77
Th
4 59
F
4 65
T
7 63
Th
7 69
F
14 66
Th
5 76

76

AUG.

M
1 80

F
13 70

66

T
1 90
M
6 87

F
18
S
4
T
13
T
5
T
25
F
6

MAY JUNE JULY

T
66
21 73
S
S
12 74 31 49
Th
2 71
T
12 74
T
11 83

S
31 63
F
12
W
8
T
6
F
15
F
14
M
28

F
27 65
T
16 76
Th
10 70
T
5 95
T
26 83

Th
31 61
W
F
10 69 31 51
F
W
17 66 27 40
M
T
20 70 31 41
T
F
1 62 31 60
M
W
74
17 66 31 44
W
M
70
15 68 29 44
S
68
31 116
S
77
29 105
M
76
31 108
S
W
10 102
31 82
Th
90
31 94

Dates and number of Calls

DATES

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31

31
46
35
32
38
19

on
“
“
“
“
“

1 First Figures In Square denote day of month call was made.
< Other Figures In Square show number of days intervening between calls.
( LETTERS In Square signify day of week call was made.

Courtesy of Crocker National Bank, San Francisco, Calif.


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

10
5
3
16
11
7
9
1
9
7
4
9
6
9
6
2
6
5
3
5
2

3
4
1
4
5
2

10
7
17
13
201

Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday

Total, 201

* Sis calls made.
KEY

CALLS

STATE BANK OFFICIALS AND EXAMINERS, 1926
State

Name

Address

Ala.............. A. E. Jackson, Supt. of Banks.........................Montgomery.
C. R. Keener, Asst. Supt. of Banks.............. Montgomery.
W. W. Crawford,member of Banking Board .Birmingham.
Frank P. Folmar,member of Banking Board.TroyW. H. Montgomery, Bank Examiner...........Montgomery.
M. A. O’Dom, Bank Examiner...................... Selma.
H. Li. McCain, Bank Examiner......................Birmingham.
A. B. McWilliams, Bank Examiner..............Athens.
A. P. Imahorn, Bank Examiner..................... Montgomery.
Ariz............ A. T. Hammons, Supt. of Banks.....................Phoenix.
A. R. Davis, Chief Bank Examiner..............Phoenix.
Clarence Cox, Deputy Bank Examiner.... Phoenix.
Minnie Seaman, Acct.-Stenographer............ Phoenix
C. B. Smith, Special Bank Examiner...........Phoenix.
Ark............. Loid Rainwater, Bank Commissioner........... Little Rock.
R. G. Dickinson, Asst. Bk. Commissioner.. Little Rock.
Oliver Phillips, Asst. Commissioner in
charge of Building & Loan Associations.. Little Rock.
H H. Cooper Bank Examiner....................... Little Rock.
J. W. Jarrett, Bank Examiner........................Little Rock.
J. C. Wilson, Bank Examiner..........................Little Rock.
Theo. P. Carson, Bank Examiner..................Little Rock.
E. B. Futrell, Asst. Bank Examiner............. Little Rock.
Calif............John Franklin Johnson, Supt. of Banks.. ..7th Floor, Security
Bldg., 343 Sansome
St., San Francisco.
Colo........... Grant McFerson. Bank Commissioner..........Denver.
Axel B. Olson, Chief Deputy Bank Com... Denver.
M. M. Ewing, Deputy Bank Com................ Denver.
John Jepson, Deputy Bank Com...................Denver.
Walter J. Nelson, Deputy Bank Com.
Office, 125 State Office Bldg........................Denver.
J. L. Morehead, Deputy Bank Com............. Denver.
Conn...........John B. Byrne, Commissioner......................... Putnam.
Lester E. Shippee, Deputy Com.................... East Killingly.
Wm. P. Landon, Mgr. Bond Dept.................Hartford.
Wm. N. Scott, Chief Examiner......................Hartford.
Mary E. Elwood, Bank Examiner................ Hartford.
A. F. Austin, Bank Examiner......................... Torrington.
V. I. Neilson, Bank Examiner........................ Hartford.
K. B. Reynolds, Bank Examiner................... Branford.
George Austin, Bank Examiner..................... Hartford.
Edward R. Barlow, Bank Examiner............ Hartford.
Harold P. Splain, Bank Examiner................ New Haven.
Ray L. Makin, Bank Examiner..................... Hartford.
Philip Moriarty, Bank Examiner...................Hartford.
L. A. Tobie, Bank Examiner...........................Bloomfield.
Ralph H. McKinnel, Bank Examiner..........East Haven.
John F. DiNonno. Bank Examiner...............New Britain.
Frank E. Irving, Bank Examiner.................. Bridgeport.
Sherwood B. Potter, Bank Examiner........... Brooklyn.
George B. Hotchkiss, Bank Examiner......... Hartford.
R. Gordon Baldwin, Bank Examiner........... Bristol.
“
Webster D. Copp, Bank Examiner............... Norwich.
Dela............Harold W. Horsey, State Bank Com............Dover.
Ira Lewis, Deputy Bank Com.........................Bridgeville.
Paul D. Lovett, Clerk.........................................Newark.
Fla..............Ernest Amos, Comptroller.................................Tallahassee.
W. M. McIntosh, Jr. General Chief Clerk.Tallahasse.
R. A. Gray, Asst, to the Comptroller...........Tallahassee.
A. W. Saarinen, Banking Clerk...................... Tallahassee.
J. E. Perkins, Bank Examiner........................ Tallahassee.
E. M. Porter, Chief Bank Examiner............ Tallahassee.
T. C. Hawkins, Bank Examiner.....................Box 685
Miami.
G. C. White, Bank Examiner..........................Starke.
H. C. Cooper, Bank Examiner........................Tallahassee.
R. F. Rogers, Jr., Bank Examiner.................Dunnellon.
W. C. Sale, Bank Examiner.............................Coconut Grove.
E. P. Jackson, Bank Examiner.......................Tallahassee.
Ga............... T. R. Bennett, Supt. of Banks........................ Atlanta.
J. E. Cagle, Asst. Supt. of Banks.................. Atlanta.
R. B. Gunby, Bank Examiner........................ Columbus.
E. B. Douglass, Bank Examiner.................... Talbotton.
W. D. Lloyd, Bank Examiner......................... Tallapoosa.
M. E. Sisk, Bank Examiner..............................Greensboro.
N. R. Henderson, Bank Examiner................ Douglasville.
O. G. Jackson, Bank Examiner...................... College Park.
W. J. Davis. Bank Examiner.......................... Portal.
M. J. Janes, Bank Examiner........................... Griffin.
LI. B. Pitt, Bank Examiner..............................Lincolnton.
Idaho........ E. W. Porter. Commissioner of Finance. . . .Boise.
H. G. A. Winter, Chief Examiner, Blue skyBoise.
C. I. Canfield, Chief Bank Examiner...........Boise.
W. H. Horne, Examiner....................................Boise.
E. Scott, Gen -1 Liquidating Agent................ Boise.
J. R. Middleton, Examiner.............................. Boise.
Illinois. . . .Oscar Nelson, Auditor, Main Office..............Springfield.
Chicago Office: 1300. 76 W. Monroe St.
E. E. Nicholson, Chief Bank Examiner. . . .Springfield.
Carl H. Weber, Ass’t Chief Bank Exam.. .Springfield.
Chas. Curren, Jr., Bank Examiner................Chicago.
F. E. Edgerton, Chief Examiner.................... Chicago.
Ralph Fairbairn, Bank Examiner.................. Chicago.
Harrison Mathewson, Bank Examiner........ Chicago.
C. H. Ruedi, Bank Examiner..........................Chicago.
John W. Cruden, Bank Examiner................. Chicago.
A. E. Kimlin, Bank Examiner........................ Chicago.
H. E. Robertson, Bank Examiner................. Chicago.
Arthur M. Tarman, Bank Examiner............Chicago.
F. A. Adams, Bank Examiner......................... Springfield.
F. A. Bach, Bank Examiner............................ Springfield.
M. S. Barber, Bank Examiner........................ Springfield.
Frank Chew, Bank Examiner..........................Springfield.
Glen C. Hodges, Bank Examiner................... Springfield.
O. A. James, Bank Examiner.......................... Springfield.
J. B. Lennon. Bank Examiner........................ Springfield.
J. L. Northrup, Bank Examiner.....................Springfield.
E. R. Petrie, Bank Examiner.......................... Springfield.
J. E. Shearer, Bank Examiner........................ Springfield.
W. C. Shy, Bank Examiner..............................Springfield.
W. E. Turner. Bank Examiner....................... Springfield.
J. W. McClellan, Trust Examiner.................Springfield.
Ind..............Thos. D. Barr Bank Commissioner...............Indianapolis.
Luther F. Symons, Deputy Commissioner. .Lewisville.
Don P. Carpenter, Chief Examiner.............. Brazil.
C. M. Lawrence, Bank Examiner..................Princeton.
J. Paul McMillan, Bank Examiner............... Edinburg.
Cly R. Humston, Bank Examiner..................Warsaw.
John C. Sanders, Bank Examiner.................. Delphi.
Wm. R. Dexheimer, Bank Examiner............Hammond.
Frank M. Brandon, Bank Examiner............ Auburn.
Morris E. Stults, Bank Examiner..................Portland.
J. W. Parrett, Bank Examiner....................... Indianapolis.
J. N. West, Bank Examiner.............................Greenwood.
Iowa.......... Robert L. Leach, Supt. of Banking............... Des Moines.
Carl S. Foster, Deputy Supt............................Des Moines.
N. B. Shaffer. Chief Examiner.......................Altoona.
E. R. Mauss, Special Examiner....................Des Moines.
B. C. Barker, Examiner.................................... Des Moines.
J. A. Heng, Bank Examiner.............................Davenport.
H. L. Brown, Bank Examiner......................... Des Moines.


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

11

State

Name

Address

Iowa
J. A. Parden, Bank Examiner..........................Mason City.
(cont.) A. E. Rugg, Bank Examiner...........................Des Moines.
V. J. Wilson, Bank Examiner..........................Cedar Rapids.
“
L. H. Jurgemeyer, Bank Examiner................Lakota.
J. F. Wanberg, Bank Examiner......................Des Moines.
“
V. L. Bartling, Bank Examiner..................... Waterloo.
“
N. A. Buck, Bank Examiner............................ Brighton.
“
J. H. Peterman, Bank Examiner...................Indianola
Wm. Taylor, Bank Examiner.........................Adel.
B. H. Wood. Bank Examiner......................... Perry.
"
V. O. Figge, Bank Examiner. .......................... Ossian.
“
R. S. Beatty, Bank Examiner........................Storm Lake.
“
F. A. Heldridge Bank Examiner. . ................ Milford.
Kansas.. ..Roy L. Bone, Bank Commissioner................ Topeka.
“
W. S. Kennedy, Asst. Bank Com................... Topeka.
“
Geo. P. Stitt .Spec.Asst.Blue Sky Dept.. . .Topeka.
“
J. W. Johnson, Supervisor Bldg. & Loan
Department....................................................... Topeka.
“
W. F. Thompson, Asst. Supt. Bldg. & Loan
Dept..................................................................... Topeka.
Anna E. Speck, Deputy Bank Com.................Topeka.
Harry O’Brien, Bank Examiner.....................Parsons.
P. V. Miller, Bank Examiner.......................... Highland.
F. G. Bergen, Bank Examiner........................ Topeka.
II. D. Bowman, Bank Examiner....................Topeka.
C. B. Carson, Bank Examiner........................ Topeka.
Jas. T. McPherson, Bank Examiner.............Topeka.
A. R. Wilson, Bank Examiner........................ Coffeyville.
Dale R. Ainsworth, Bank Examiner.............Norton.
J. F. Ayres, Bank Examiner............................Wichita.
•
R. O. Bishop, Bank Examiner........................Hutchinson.
War. O. Brooks, Bank Examiner..................Hutchinson.
N. R. Oberwortmann, Bank Examiner. . . ,Chetopa.
T. J. Rhodes, Bank Examiner........................ Frankfort.
Lee H. Rowley, Bank Examiner....................Salina.
Ky..............C. E. Marvin, Banking Com............................ Midway.
S. A. Phillips, Deputy Bank Com............... Corbin.
H. H. Shanks, Bank Examiner........................ Stanford.
Jno. M. Calhoun Bank Examiner................ Maysville.
Floyd B. Clark, Bank Examiner.....................Glasgow.
J. Bryan Smith, Building & Loan Exam.. . Hinman.
W. L. Coons, Bank Examiner.........................Lexington.
"
C. M. Dunn, Bank Examiner...........................Southland.
La............... J. S. Brock, State Bank Com........................... New Orleans.
O. H. Pittman, Chief Bank Examiner......... New Orleans.
W. LoRoy Ward, Jr., Chief Clerk.................New Orleans.
W. C. Evans, Bank Examiner........................ New Orleans.
M. Finnegan, Bank Examiner........................ New Orleans.
Louis Buckner, Jr., Bank Examiner.............Shreveport.
A. R. Johnson, Jr., Bank Examiner............. New Orleans.
W. E. Wood, Bank Examiner.........................New Orleans.
Howell Morgan, Bank Examiner...................Baton Rouge.
Verna Foil, Secretary......................................... New Orleans.
Mrs. L. J. Dumestre, Clerk............................. New Orleans.
Mrs. John J. Dutel, Clerk................................New Orleans.
Miss Hilda Manning, Clerk.............................New Orleans.
Maine. . . .Sanger N. Annis, Deputy Bank Com........... Augusta.
John G. Smith. Bank Commissioner............ Saco.
T. J. Parker, Senior Examiner....................... Belfast.
Anne B. Annis, Chief Clerk............................. Augusta.
Ernest C. Stinson, Bank Examiner.............. Bangor.
Woodbury Wallace, Bank Examiner............Augusta.
Harold F. Dana, Bank Examiner..................Auburn.
Harry E. Henderson, Asst. Bank Examiner.Waterville.
F. Bernice Stanish, Asst. Clerk...................... Gardiner.
“
Alonzo D. Nutter, Securities Examiner. . . .Augusta.
Md............. Geo. W. Page, Bank Com., Union Trust
Building.............................................................. Baltimore.
“
John D. Hospelhorn, Deputy Bank Com.
Union Trust Bldg.............................................Baltimore.
“
Wm. J. Gerbig, Senior Examiner, Union
Trust Bldg.......................................................... Baltimore.
“
Chas. L. Hobbs, Senior Examiner, Union
Trust Bldg.......................................................... Baltimore.
W. J. Barrett, Jr., Senior Examiner,
Union Trust Bldg............................................ Baltimore.
T. H. Sherman, Senior Examiner, Union
Trust Bldg............................................................ Baltimore.
"
A. C. Merrian, Jr., Senior Examiner, Union
Trust Bldg.......................................................... Baltimore.
J. M. Harvey, Junior Examiner, Union
Trust Bldg.......................................................... Baltimore.
S. W. Mitzel, Junior Examiner, Union
Trust Bldg.......................................................... Baltimore.
W. E. Lutman, Junior Examiner, Union
Trust Bldg.
................................................. Baltimore.
Mass..........Roy A. Hovey, Com. of Bank..........................Wakefield.
Wm. J. Fowler, Deputy Com. of Banks. . .Beverly.
Arthur Guy, Director of Div. of Savings Bks.Framingham.
“
Chas. H. Answorth, Director of Div. of Tr.
Companies..........................................................Everett.
“
Leroy W. Leland, Asst. Director of Div. of
Trust Companies............................................. Newtonville.
“
O. M. Tucker, Director of Div. of Co­
operative Banks and Credit Unions...........West Somerville.
“
R. J. Tubbs, Asst. Director of Div. of Co­
operative Banks and Credit Unions...........Greenwood.
Herbert Rogers, Director of Div. of Credits. Belmont.
Nelson B. Davis, Chief Clerk..........................Newton Highlands.
Chas. J. Bateman, Jr., Bank Director......... Watertown.
Walter S. Bosworth, Bank Examiner...........Malden.
Eugene Brimmer, Bank Examiner................ Malden.
Forest F. Bursley. Bank Examiner..............Somerville.
Howard A. Clark, Bank Examiner................Wakefield.
Henry J. Croughwell, Bank Examiner.........West Peabody.
Chas. A. Crowell, Bank Examiner.................Salem.
George F. Davee, Bank Examiner.................Plymouth.
William E. Day, Bank Examiner...................Chelsea.
Ralph E. Ellis, Bank Examiner...................... Medford.
Chester A. Gray, Bank Examiner..................Somerville.
Harold P. Jenks, Bank Examiner.................. Dorchester Center
Wm. B. Jensen, Bank Examiner.................... Framingham.
Harry P. Jones, Bank Examiner.................... Belmont.
John L. Keyes, Bank Examiner..................... Lowell.
George H. Magurn, Bank Examiner............ Roslindale.
George C. Mansfield, Bank Examiner..........Rockland.
Bert O. McKinley, Bank Examiner..............Boston.
Arthur Morey. Bank Examiner...................... Watertown.
Geo. F. Powers Bank Examiner..................... Arlington.
John W. Slye, Bank Examiner....................... Malden.
Nathan L. Whitten, Bank Examiner.......... Campello.
Harold E. Almy. Asst. Bank Examiner....... Dorchester
Carl H. Baker, Asst. Bank Examiner.......... Wollaston.
Chas. E. Bartlett, Asst. Bank. Examiner... Brookline.
“
Arthur L. Brackett, Asst. Bank Exam......... Wollaston.
“
Joseph L. Brighton, Asst. Bk. Exam............ Somerville.
Joseph A. Chambers. Asst. Bk. Exam. . . .Brighton.
“
Joseph F. Connellan, Asst. Bk. Exam...........Brookline.
Everett L. Crowell, Asst. Bk. Exam............. Brockton.
Matthew Cushing, Asst. Bank Examiner... Beverly.

STATE BANK OFFICIALS AND EXAMINERS—Continued
State

Name

State

Address

Mass.......... Phillip A. Damon, Asst. Bk. Exam................ Stoneham.
(cont.)
Lawrence E. Donovan, Asst. Bk. Exam... .Brighton.
*•
Arthur W. Flint, Asst. Bk. Exam................... Wakefield.
“
Winthrop L. Graham, Asst. Bk. Exam.........Revere.
“
John S. Gwinn, Asst. Bank Exam................ Beverly.
“
Frank A. Hannan, Asst. Bank Examiner. . Malden.
Raymond P. Harold, Asst. Bank Exam.. . .Worcester.
Frederick A. Harris, Asst. Bank Ex.............. Beverly.
“
Charles W. Herzig, Asst. Bank Exam........... Wollaston.
Francis J. Hillberg, Asst. Bank Exam..........Newton Lower Falls.
Paul C. Howley, Asst. Bank Exam................Lynn.
Frank L. Hubbard, Asst. Bank Ex................Waverley.
Herbert L. Keeble. Asst. Bank Exam...........Melrose Highlands.
“
Harrison S. King, Asst. Bank Examiner. . .Wakefield.
Robert G. Leavitt, Asst. Bank Exam........... Allston.
Harlan E. Miller, Asst. Bank Exam..............Lowell.
Roger W. Nutt, Asst. Bank Exam.................Dorchester.
R. Stuart Parker, Asst. Bank Exam..............Boston.
John F. Rich. Asst. Bank Examiner.............Dorchester.
W. S. Savery, Asst. Bank Examiner.............Plymouth.
Harrv L. Sawyer. Asst. Bank Examiner. . .Watertown.
Harold B. Spurling, Asst. Bank Exam......... East Lynn.
Carleton E. Staples, Asst. Bank Exam.........Brockton.
Euegene F. Storrs, Asst. Bank Exam............Needham.
B. F. Strand. Jr., Asst. Bank Exam............. Dorchester Center.
Stephen M. Torrey, Asst. Bank Exam.........Marblehead.
John E. Turner, Asst. Bank Examiner.........Reading.
George V. Wallace, Jr., Asst. Bk. Exam. . .Wakefield.
Arthur Welwood, Asst. Bank Examiner... .Boston.
Horace W. Whynot, Asst. Bank Exam........Roxbury.
Elwood A. Wyman. Asst. Bank Exam.........Whitman.
Mich...........H. A. McPherson, Com. of Banking..............Lansing.
H. O. Mohrmann. Deputy Com......................Lansing.
D. E. Lawrence, Chief Examiner................... Eaton Rapids.
C. E. Kaye, Chief Exam. Finance Co. Div.Lansing.
R. H. Larabee, Chief Clerk.............................. Lansing.
H. W. Avery, Asst. Bank Examiner............. Milford.
E. W. Barber, Asst. Bank Examiner.............Camden.
B. F. Bernsteine. Bank Examiner..................Mancelona.
L. D. Bissell, Bank Examiner..........................Lansing.
K. H. Buttars, Asst. Bank Examiner........... Bay City.
F. H. Coward, Asst. Bank Examiner............Webberville.
E. B. Finley, Jr., Asst. Bank Examiner. .. .Hartford.
C. A, Fors, Asst. Bank Examiner.................. Sunfleld.
J. A. Hanslovsky, Asst. Bank Examiner. . .Ann Arbor.
C. M. Heck, Asst. Bank Examiner............... Lansing.
R. I. Hudson, Bank Examiner........................Decatur.
H. C. Knickerbocker, Bank Examiner.........East Lansing.
Chas. W. Lee, Bank Examiner....................... Laingsburg.
James Leenliouts, Asst. Bank Examiner. . .Grand Rapids.
Fred Marin, Bank Examiner............................Flint.
E. W. Nelson, Asst. Bank Examiner............ Ann Arbor.
J. Ralph Piche. Asst. Bank Examiner..........Detroit.
E. C. Reid, Bank Pixaminer............................. Davison.
L. D. Rose, Bank Examiner.............................Bay City.
R. W. Rowe, Bank Examiner..........................Hillsdale.
A. C. Smith, Asst. Bank Examiner............... Ann Arbor.
G. A. Stone, Asst. Bank Examiner................Grand Rapids.
H. G. Taylor, Asst. Bank Examiner.............Sault Ste. Marie.
M. C. Taylor, Bank Examiner........................Saginaw.
R. P. Teeters, Asst. Bank Examiner............ Henderson.
L. C. Van Auken, Bank Examiner................ Lansing.
C. L. Van P'rank, Bank Examiner................. Grand Rapids
R. T. Willard, Bank Examiner....................... Grand Rapids.
A. L. Wilson, Bank Examiner.........................Ludington.
P. C. Yuli, Asst. Bank Examiner...................Lansing.
O. C. Zook, Bank Examiner............................ Ludington.
Ralph Clench, Small Loan Agency Exam. . Battle Creek.
Minn......... A. J. Veigel, Commissioner of Banks............ St. Paul.
Geo. H. Sivwright, DeputyCom.of Banks. .St. Paul.
Wm. A. Smith, Bank Examiner..................... St. Paul.
In charge of liquidation.
E. W. Swanson, Bank Examiner (Cities of
first class)........................................................... Minneapolis.
O. I. Brandvold, Bank Examiner...................Fergus P'alls.
A. P. Rotert, Bank Examiner..........................St. Paul.
F. V. Artig, Bank Examiner............................ Sauk Rapids.
Geo. P. Daily, Bank Examiner....................... E. Grand Rapids
A. F. Schwieger, Bank Examiner................... Montevideo.
N. D. Dixon, Bank Examiner......................... Minneapolis.
II. R. Kneeland, Bank Examiner.................. St. Peter.
M. E. Walsh. Bank Examiner.........................St. Paul.
W. J. Stutzman, Bank Examiner.................. Mankato.
J. G. Schultz, Jr., Bank Examiner............... Winona.
W. R. Nolan, Asst. Examiner......................... Minneapolis.
H. V. Montgomery, Asst. Examiner............ Minneapolis.
Henry Lende, Asst. Examiner.........................Appleton.
G. V. Markey, Assistant Examiner.............. Worthington.
Jacob Rigg, Assistant Examiner....................Ada.
R. S. Picha, Asst. Examiner.............................St. Paul.
E. A. Highum, Asst. Examiner....................... Preston.
H. G. McConnell, Asst. Examiner.................Mankato.
W. E. Downey, Asst. Examiner.....................Duluth.
A. A. Sorenson, Asst. Examiner.....................Oakland.
C. E. Melbye, Asst. Examiner........................Fergus Falls.
C. D. Lundin, Chief Clerk................................St. Paul.
Miss........... J. S. Love, Supt. of Banks...............................Jackson.
Mo..............C. E. French, Com. of Finance....................... Jefferson City.
S. L. Cantley, Deputy Com. of Finance. . .Jefferson City.
A. C. Martin, Deputy Com. of Finance... Jefferson City.
(in chg. Insolvent Banks)
H. C. Mueller, Examiner (In chg. Building
and Loan Department)................................. Jefferson City.
Geo. W. Berri, Bank Examiner.......................St. Louis.
C. L. Bollinger, Bank Examiner......... ........... Springfield.
C. E. Bushnbll, Bank Examiner.....................Bolivar.
Leon Clippard, Bank Examiner..................... Springfield.
C. M. Duncan, Bank Examiner..................... Poplar Bluff.
Geo. U. Freund, Bank Examiner................... Warsaw.
F. A. Guiles, Bank Examiner.......................... Kirksville.
H. G. Harrison, Bank Examiner.................... Piedmont.
F. W. Heyde, Jr., Bank Examiner................ St. Joseph.
Joe McElvain, Bank Examiner...................... Chillicothe.
E. T. Messenbaugh, Bank Examiner........... Mexico.
U. P. Moody, Bank Examiner........................ Wentworth.
Joe Mulligan, Bank Examiner........................ Kansas City.
J. B. Norris, Bank Examiner.......................... St. Louis.
Sam Sharp, Jr., Bank Examiner.....................Montgomery City.
R. E. Shelby, Bank Examiner.........................Albany.
Claude L. Stout. Bank Examiner.................. Savannah.
B. H. Swan, Bank Examiner........................... Silex.
Oscar C. Vemmer, Bank Examiner...............Owensville.
Oliver J. Axt, Asst Bank Examiner............. Clayton.
W. J. McCaw, Asst. Bank Examiner........... Rolla.
B. A. Glassen, Asst. Bank Examiner........... Salisbury.
John O. Newberry, Asst. Bank Examiner. .Kansas City.
Joseph Zick, Asst. Bank Examiner............... Kansas City.
Mont......... Jay G. Larson, Supt. of Banks........................ Helena.
C. M. McCoy, Examiner................................. Helena.
S. L. Kleve, Examiner...................................... Helena.
R. L. Smith, Examiner...................................... Helena.


https://fraser.stlouisfed.org
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

Mont. .
(cont.)

Neb.

Nev..
N. H,
N. J.

M.

12

Name

Address

Thos. T. Taylor, Jr., Examiner.......................Helena.
R. N. Hawkins, Asst. State Examiner......... Helena.
A. E. Williamson, 2d Asst. State Exam.. . .Missoula.
F. E. Williams, Deputy State Examiner. . .Billings.
R. A. Lathom, Deputy State Examiner.. ..Columbus.
Kirk Griggs, Secretary, Dept, of Trade &
Commerce.......................................................... Lincoln.
E. F. Kimmerly, Chief Bank Examiner. .. .Lincoln.
L. E. Martin, Bank Examiner........................ Beatrice.
P. D. Marshall, Bank Examiner....................Lincoln.
O. A. Helquest, Bank Examiner.................... Omaha.
Merle N. Foster, Bank Examiner.................. Wayne.
C. J. Hornsby, Bank Examiner...................... Hastings.
Geo. B. Wilson. Bank Examiner.................... Grand Island.
C. A. Lau, Bank Examiner................................Sutherland.
Edmund Steinauer, Bank Examiner............. Lincoln.
S. L. Ilestbeck, Bank Examiner..................... Holdredge.
Geo. D. Cooper, Bank Examiner................... Columbus.
Henry H. Schleuning, Bank Examiner........ Lincoln.
.Geo. M. Southward, Bank Examiner............Carson City.
.Arthur E. Dole, Commissioner........................Concord.
George E. Farrand, Deputy Com................... Concord.
.Thomas K. Johnston. Deputy Com.............. Trenton.
Christopher A. Gough, Asst. Deputy Com.Trenton.
Horace Biddle, Asst. Bank Examiner...........Asbury Park.
Chas. II. Dunham, Asst. Bk. Examiner... .Plainfield.
A. S. Amerman, Bank Examiner....................Trenton.
Robt. F. Minch, Bank Examiner...................Bridgeton.
Geo. Compton. Bank Examiner......................Trenton.
G. Hayes Markley, Bank Examinor.............Westfield.
Martin K. Fowler, Asst. Bank Examiner.. .Newark.
V. D. Peer, Bank Examiner............................ Summit.
Jacob Kraus, Jr., Bank Examiner................. Weehawken Heights
Hugh H. Hilson, Bank Examiner.................. Trenton.
Frank M . Power, Asst. Bk. Examiner......... Ridgefield Park.
Edward M. Field, Asst. Bank Examiner. .Elizabeth.
W. B. Firman, Asst. Bank Examiner........... Trenton.
Geo. A. McLaughlin, Asst. Bank Exam.. . .Trenton.
J. A. Maloney, Asst. Bank Examiner..........Jersey City.
D. O. Stabily, Asst. Bk. Examiner............... Summit.
John T. Connelly, Asst. Bank Examiner.. .Trenton.
Morris L. Parsels, Asst. Bank Examiner. . .Atlantic City.
John B. Cunningham, Asst. Bank Exam.. .Jersey City.
Robert B. Allerdice, Asst. Bank Exam.........Westfield.
Harry Prosser, Asst. Bank Examiner...........Atlantic City.
,W. P. Saunders, State Bank Examiner... .Santa F9.
W. F. Kirby, Deputy State Bk. Exam.........Santa Fe.
F. M. Culberson, Deputy State Bk. Exam.Santa Fe.
Don Ii. Casados, Chief Clerk......................... Santa Fe.
Naomi McDaniel, Secretary............................Santa Fe.
J. B. Grant, Special Asst. Blue Sky Dept.... Santa Fe.
Frank H. Warder, Supt..................................... Albany.
George Overocker. 1st Deputy....................... Poughkeepsie.
George A. Coleman, 2nd Deputy................... Poughkeepsie.
James J. Kennedy, 3rd Deputy...................... New York City.
Thomas J. O’Connell, 4th Deputy............... New York City.
G. W. Egbert, Chief Examiner.......................51 ChambersSt.,N.Y
II. J. Young, Bank Examiner..........................Syracuse.
H. S. Andrews. Bank Examiner..................... 51ChambersSt.,N.Y.
R. W. Humphrey, Bank Examiner............... 51ChambersSt.,N.Y.
G. S. Adams, Bank Examiner.........................51ChambersSt.,N.Y.
J. S. Love, Bank Examiner..............................51ChambersSt.,N.Y.
G. A. Plant, Bank Examiner........................... Albany.
N. T. Killip. Bank Examiner..........................Oswego.
Fletcher G. Crane, Bank Examiner.............. 5lChambersSt.,N.Y.
B. B. Bullock, Bank Examiner...................... 51ChambersSt.,N.Y.
H. B. Kennedy, Bank Examiner....................Auburn
Joseph H. Zweeres, Bank Examiner............. Rochester.
John I. Mesick, Bank Examiner.....................51ChambersSt.,N.Y.
F. W. Piderit, Bank Examiner........................SlChambersSt.,N.Y.
Peter N. Shippee, Bank Examiner................ Albany.
Nathaniel Orens, Bank Examiner................. 51ChambersSt.,N.Y.
Milton L. Masson, Bank Examiner............. 51ChambersSt.,N.Y.
S. I. Chittenden, Bank Examiner.................. 51ChambersSt.,N Y.
Arthur B. Vogel, Bank Examiner.................. 51ChambersSt.,N.Y.
E. W. Irving, Bank Examiner........................ 51ChambersSt.,N.Y.
C. E. Nathaway, Bank Examiner................. 51ChambersSt.,N.Y.
Rho L. Bush, Bank Examiner.........................51ChambersSt.,N.Y.
Louis N. Roe, Bank Examiner....................... 51ChambersSt.,N.Y.
Ralph T. Simmons. Bank Examiner.............SlChambersSt- N.Y.
Arthur Koch, Bank Examiner.........................Saratoga Springs.
G. M. Aldrich, Bank Examiner......................SlChambersSt.,N.Y.
F. L. H. Holzer, Bank Examiner................... Buffalo.
Wm. Cuffney, Bank Examiner........................ Syracuse.
Geo. E. Varcoe, Bank Examiner.................... Rochester.
Lawrence II. Geser, Bank Examiner............51ChambersSt.,N.Y.
Geo. A. Strack, Bank Examiner.....................51ChambersSt.,N.Y.
L. W. Palmer, Bank Examiner....................... Rochester.
Herbert C. Rogers. Bank Examiner............. 51ChambersSt.,N.Y.
Franklin W. Bright, Bank Examiner........... 51ChambersSt.,N.Y.
E. J. Bangert, Bank Examiner....................... Holland.
Fred T. Bolan, Bank Examiner......................SlChambersSt.,N.Y.
Charles Clarke, Bank Examiner..................... Albany.
Mortimer S. Cole, Bank Examiner................51ChambersSt.,N.Y.
Reginald W. Pawling, Bank Examiner.........SlChambersSt.,N.Y.
Samuel Rauch, Bank Examiner...................... SlChambersSt.,N.Y.
Alfred L. Taylor, Bank Examiner.................SlChambersSt.,N.Y.
Wm. D. Navin. Bank Examiner....................Schenectady.
Charles D. Zimmer. Bank Examiner............51ChambersSt.,N.Y.
John M. Egan, Bank Examiner.....................Buffalo.
Roy E. Miller, Bank Examiner..................... Buffalo.
Ambrose J. Delaney. Bank Examiner..........Rochester.
Theo. B. Furman, Bank Examiner.............. SlChambersSt.,N.Y.
Schuyler L. Baum. Bank Examiner.............. Syracuse.
A. F. Beyerle, Bank Examiner....................... SlChambersSt.,N.Y.
Guy F. Baker, Bank Examiner.......................Syracuse.
Frank C. Maher,Bank Examiner..................SlChambersSt.,N.Y.
Stanley W. Farrell, Bank Examiner............. SlChambersSt.,N.Y.
Arthur P. McQuade, Bank Examiner...........SlChambersSt.,N.Y.
Arthur W. Mischanko, Bank Examiner... .SlChambersSt.,N.Y.
C. G. Niebank, Bank Examiner.................... Rochester.
Thomas M. Little, Bank Examiner.............. Buffalo.
James A. Schaumburg, Bank Examiner... .SlChambersSt.,N.Y.
Wm. P. Mitchell, Bank Examiner................SlChambersSt.,N.Y.
Andrew Eisen, Bank Examiner......................SlChambersSt.,N.Y.
George R. Dise, Bank Examiner...................Buffalo.
George F. Butt, Examiner...............................51ChambersSt.,N.Y.
Harry N. Herber, Jr., Bank Examiner.........SlChambersSt.,N.Y.
Marcus Koster, Bank Examiner....................SlChambersSt.,N.Y.
Edward H. Leete, Bank Examiner............... SlChambersSt.,N.Y.
John C. Hasbrouck, Bank Examiner........... SlChambersSt.,N.Y.
John J. Sullivan, Bank Examiner..................SlChambersSt.,N.Y.
Guy E. Thompson, Bank Examiner.............Buffalo.
Thomas F. Mudae, Bank Examiner............. SlChambersSt.,N.Y.
Chas. H. Schoch, Bank Examiner................. 51ChambersSt.,N.Y.
Blanche M. Borthwick, Bank Examiner. . .Albany.
John A. Tripp, Bank Examiner...................... SlChambersSt.,N.Y.
R. A. Brennan, Bank Examiner..................... SlChambersSt.,N.Y.
William J. McAuliffe, Bank Examiner........ 51ChambersSt.,N Y.
.Clarence Latham, Chief Bank Examiner. ..Raleigh.
W. L. Williams Bank Examiner....................Raleigh.
R. E. Kerr. Bank Examiner.............................Raleigh.

STATE BANK OFFICIALS AND EXAMINERS—Continued
State

Name

Address

State

N. C...
(cont.)

John Mitchell, Bank Examiner...................... Kaleigh.
G. N. Hensen, Bank Examiner...................... Raleigh.
D. M. Darden, Asst. Bank Examiner.......... Raleigh.
L. H. Harrison. Asst. Bank Examiner......... Raleigh.
R. G. Harrison, Asst. Bank Examiner.........Raleigh.
O. C. Meroney, Clerk..........................................Raleigh.
N.
.Gilbert Semingson. State Bank Examiner..Bismarck.
F. B. McAneney, Chief Deputy Examiner.Bismarck.
E. O. Bailey, Office Deputy............................. Bismarck.
R. S. See, Deputy Examiner............................Minot.
J. L. McRae, Deputy Examiner.....................Devils Lake.
J. M. Shirek, Deputy Examiner..................... Bismarck.
J. K. Nesvik, Deputy Examiner.................... Grand Forks.
O. H. Ex-ickson, Deputy Examiner................ Bismarck.
O. A. Engemoen. Deputy Examiner............. Valley City.
Harold Nomland, Deputy Examiner............ Fargo.
J. R. Snyder, Deputy Exam. (City and Co.).Bismarck.
J. A. Brown, Deputy Exam. (City and Co.).Rolla.
T. J. Hagen, Deputy Exam. (City and Co.). Grand Forks.
R. W. Kennard, Deputy Examiner, (City
and County).......................................................Minot.
Ohio.. . . . .H. E. Scott, Superintendent............................ Columbus.
Frank R. Ambrose, Asst. Supt........................ Columbus.
F. A. Hunter, Attorney Examiner.................Columbus.
Edgar Ervin, Attorney Trust Examiner. . .Columbus.
George T. Blake, Foreign Ex. and Tr. OfflcerColumbus.
W. J. Skehan. Bank Examiner....................... Toledo.
Henry J. Schulte, Bank Examiner.................Cincinnati.
R. C. Parrish, Bank Examiner....................... Lakewood.
L. C. Bucher, Bank Examiner........................ Cincinnati.
C. W. Miller, Bank Examiner.........................Newark.
J. E. Mason, Bank Examiner..........................Medina.
H. L. Lockwood, Bank Examiner..................Frankfort.
D. J. Schurr, Bank Examiner..........................Columbus.
Eugene E. King, Bank Examiner...................Deshler.
Gordon W. Burr, Bank Examiner................. Rocky River.
Park G. Ogden, Asst. Trust Examiner........ Columbus
F. M. Hoopengarner. Asst. Bank Exam... .Columbus.
E. R. Schurr, Bank Examiner......................... London.
N. E. Rcichelderfer, Bank Examiner.......... Circleville.
C. A. Ladrach, Examiner................................. Sugar Creek.
Win. Purdy, Examiner.......................................Findlay.
Vernon L. Hawk, Asst. Examiner................. Tiffin.
Lawrence E. Smart, Asst. Examiner............ Columbus.
Hugh L. Leggett, Asst. Examiner................. Columbus.
Ira J. Fulton, Bank Examiner........................ Cleveland.
Paul Warner, Asst. Bank Examiner..............Utica.
H. F. Ashley, Asst. Bank Examiner............. Oberlin.
Okla. .. . . .O. B. Mothersead, Bank Com........................Oklahoma City.
Waldo Watkins, Asst. Bank Com................. Oklahoma City.
W. C. Ernest, Bank Examiner........................Oklahoma City.
J. D. Pennington, Bank Examiner................ Oklahoma City.
Roy Walcott, Bank Examiner........................ Cleveland.
J. W . Shofner. Bank Examiner.......................Oklahoma City.
H. C. Morris. Bank Examiner........................Durant.
M. C. Trimble, Bank Examiner.....................Shawnee.
W. J. Martin, Bank Examiner....................... Guthrie.
E. H. Kelley, Bank Examiner......................... McAlester
Paul Harbaugh, Bank Examiner....................Alva.
C. J. Alexander, Bank Examiner................... Oklahoma City.
John F. Mahr, Bldg. & Loan Auditor..........Oklahoma City.
Ore..
.F. C. Bramwell, Supt. of Banks..................... Salem.
Guy N. Hickok, Asst. Supt. and Examiner.Salem.
E. M. Watson, Bank Examiner......................Salem.
E. A. Simonton, Secretary................................Salem.
Tinkham Gilbert, Examiner.............................Salem.
H. O. Voget, Examiner...................................... Salem.
Doris Allen, Stenographer.................................Salem.
George E. Cusick, Asst. Examiner................Salem.
R. W. Davis, Examiner......................................Salem.
A. H. Olson, Examiner....................................... Salem.
.Peter G. Cameron, Sec. of Banking.............. Harrisburg.
Alvin M. Whitney, 1st Deputy Sec............... Harrisburg.
James A. Taylor, 2nd Deputy Sec................. Pittsburgh.
Irland M. Beckman, 3d Deputy Sec............. Erie.
H. H. Eshbach, Chief of Bureau of B. & L.
Associations........................................................Harrisburg
W. R . Calhoun, Chief Clerk..........................Harrisburg.
George H. Orth, Chief Bureau of Private
Banks....................................................................Harrisburg.
Walter J. Fallows, Chief Dep. Bureau of
Securities............................................................. Harrisburg.
Einar Barfod, Deputy and Chief Investi­
gator ......................................................................Harrisburg.
George II. Slaine, Private Bank Inspector. .Greensburg.
Otto B. Lippman, Inspector of Private
Banks...................................................................Harrisburg.
Mark I. Walker, Asst. Investigator Bureau
of Securities........................................................Grafton.
Henry Walton, Jr., Asst. Investigator
Bureau of Securities....................................... Philadelphia.
Campbell Robison, Asst. Investigator Bureau
of Securities........................................................Harrisburg.
C. W. Anderson, Examiner.............................. Honesdale.
George A. Augherton, Examiner....................Hatboro.
W. M. Boggs, Examiner...................................Valencia.
A. Rise Bowman, Examiner.............................Lebanon.
Walter C. Brenneis, Examiner........................Conneautville.
Chas. V. Brown, Examiner...............................Philadelphia.
Walter E. Burns. Examiner..............................Harrisburg.
Thos. M. Christley, Examiner........................ Butler.
M. H. Callender, Examiner..............................Dunmore.
Haro d IT. Davison, Examiner........................Meadville.
Fred'K. Dennison, Examiner...........................Bywood.
L. W. Dennison, Examiner...............................Warren.
Robt. G. Dickson, Examiner........................... McDonald.
Thomas Dixon. Examiner................................. Philadelphia.
Robt. W. Doty, Examiner................................Mifflintown.
John B. Dunlap, Examiner.............................. Muncy.
Timothy A. Durkin, Examiner....................... Pittston.
R. P. Ferguson. Examiner................ ............... York.
W. Clifford Ferry, Examiner........................... Oil City.
J. Allen Gebhard, Examiner............................ Lebanon.
Frank Glatfelter, Examiner..............................Columbia.
Raymond H. Gorsuch, Examiner...................Hopewell.
Arthur G. Graham, Jr., Examiner.................Oreland.
H. A. Groman, Examiner..................................Bethlehem.
J. Guy Hallowell, Examiner.............................St. Davids.
John C. Hildebrandt. Examiner..................... Philadelphia.
George L. Hill, Examiner..................................Lansford.
Walter S. Hoke. Examiner...............................Newport.
Frank H. Jackson, Examiner...........................Drexel Hill.
Frank W. Jackson, Examiner..........................Apollo.
Elwood H. Keithan. Examiner.......................Sunbury.
K. Thurman Kent. Examiner......................... Ashland.
Ralph W. Knowles. Examiner.........................Philadelphia
James W. Lance, Examiner............................. Philadelphia
R. F. Landis, Examiner.....................................Halifax.
Ralph S. Landis, Examiner.............................. Lancaster.
C. F. T. Lancaster, Examiner.........................Bellevue.
Lee A. Laubenstein, Examiner....................... Harrisburg.
Ralph Lischy, Examiner................................... Gettysburg.


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

Name

Address

Pa............... Chas. J. Long, Examiner.................................... Philadelphia.
(cont.) James S. Marshall, Examiner...........................Blairsville.
John H. McLaughlin, Examiner.....................Wilkinsburg.
William De H. Miller, Examiner................... Johnstown.
Robert R. Moore, Examiner............................ Bellevue, Pittsburgh
Lloyd D. Noel, Examiner..................................Bruin (Butler Co.)
Harold L. Oberheim, Examiner.....................Lock Haven.
Harrv J. Phillips. Examiner.............................Etna.
Edward J. Price, Examiner.............................. New Kensington.
Ralph W. Reitzel, Examiner............................Williamsport.
Ralph S. Ruth, Examiner................................. Scranton.
Howard L. Scott, Examiner............................. Ben Avon.
Charles K. Scheffter, Examiner...................... Pittsburgh.
William R. Smith, Examiner........................... Philadelphia.
Charles W. Snyder, Examiner.........................Sunbury.
W. H. Soule, Examiner...................................... Newport.
Charles A. Steele, Examiner.............................Franklin.
Clement M. Stewart, Examiner..................... Tyrone.
John T. Stewart, Examiner..............................Pittsburgh.
George M. Stroud, Jr., Examiner.................. Chester.
George S. Summers, Examiner........................Harrisburg.
William H. Spangler. Examiner......................Harrisburg.
J. D. Swigart, Examiner................................... Kittanning.
James A. Taylor. Examiner..............................Harrisburg.
Cyril G. Vogel, Examiner................................. Pittsburgh.
John S. Ward, Examiner................................... Ridley Park.
Paul D. Williams, Examiner........................... Punxsutawney.
Robert A. Wilson, Examiner........................... Littlestown.
“
' W. It. Wirth, Examiner...................................... Pittsburgh.
R- I............ Geo. H. Newhall, Bank Commissioner..........Providence.
E. J. Littlefield, Deputy Commissioner. . . .Providence.
W. L. Offer. Bank Examiner..........................Providence.
John T. Pollard, Bank Examiner...................Providence.
R. L. Sayles, Bank Examiner..........................Providence.
Albert B. Jeffers, Bank Examiner..................Providence.
John T. Marshall, Bank Examiner............... Providence.
Irma H. Goodrum, Clerk.................................. Lakewood.
“
Madeline T. Mulgrew, Clerk.............................Providence.
S. C............ W. W. Bradley. State Bank Examiner..........Columbia.
M. V. Sutherland, State Auditor................... Columbia.
A. S. Fant, Associate Bank Examiner..........Belton.
W. Royden Watkins, Associate Bk. Exam. Greenwood.
L. M. Milling, Asst. Bank Examiner........... Greenville.
F. E. Watson, Asst. Bank Examiner............Dillon.
D. J. Winn, Asst. Bank Examiner................ Greenwood.
S. D............ Fred R. Smith, Supt. of Banks.......................Pierre.
A. E. Fossum, Deputy Supt. of Banks........ Pierre.
U. G. Stevenson, Bank Examiner..................Sioux Falls.
E. J. Morris, Bank Examiner..........................Aberdeen.
Chris Hirning, Bank Examiner......................Mitchell.
S. E. Anderson, Bank Examiner....................Dell Rapids.
G. W. Schumacher, Bank Examiner............Pierre.
B. F. Bambenek, Bank Examiner..................Aberdeen.
F. S. Barber, Bank Examiner..........................Onida.
Tenn........... S. S. McConnell, Supt. of Banks....................Nashville.
Hallum W. Goodloe. Asst. Supt. of Banks. Nashville.
J. F. Hunt, Bank Examiner.............................Memphis.
H. C. Bratton, Bank Examiner......................Nashville.
H. L. Grigsby, Bank Examiner...................... Dickson.
I. H. Wilson, Bank Examiner......................... Jackson.
J. M. Davis, Bank Examiner...........................Lawrenceburg.
P. E. Callahan. Asst. Bank Examiner..........Jackson.
Texas.........Chas. O. Austin, Commissioner of Bank. . .Austin.
Utah..........Seth Pixton, Bank Commissioner....................Salt Lake City.
W. H. Hadlock. Bank Examiner....................Ogden.
R. Sherman Jones, Examiner............................Salt Lake City.
“
P. H. Service, Examiner.....................................Salt Lake City.
Vt..............R. C. Clark, Bank Commissioner................... Montpelier.
Jessie A. Watkins, Chief Clerk....................... Montpelier.
R. L. Kelleher, Bank Examiner..................... Montpelier.
L. C. Desautels, Bank Examiner...................Montpelier.
Va...............M. E. Bristow, Chief Examiner......................Richmond.
L. R. Ritchie, Asst. Examiner.........................Richmond.
C. T. Allen, Asst. Examiner.............................Kenbridge.
B. J. Woodward, Asst. Examiner.................. Richmond.
R. M. Charlton, Asst. Examiner....................Christiansburg.
“
E. A. Leake, Asst. Examiner.............................Richmond.
“
E. J. Smith. Asst. Examiner..............................Saluda.
**
W. S. Burnley, Clerk........................................... Richmond.
“
D. T. Zentmeyer, Clerk.................................... Roanoke.
Wash......... G. W. H. Davis, Director of Efficiency... .Olympia.
“
H. C. Johnson, Supervisor of Banking..........Olympia.
H. H. Hansen, Deputy Supervisor ofBkg.. Olympia.
“
C. S. Moody, Asst. Supervisor of Banking. Olympia.
“
L. A. St.ilson, Bank Examiner...........................Spokane.
R. L. Gentry, Bank Examiner........................ Spokane.
“
F. R. Amende, Bank Examiner........................Puyallup.
“
H. H. Hansen, Bank Examiner........................ Seattle.
“
R. E. Anderson, Bank Examiner..................... Spokane.
“
C. E. Jenks, Bank Examiner............................. Yakima.
“
‘ S. Zeno Varnes, Bank Examiner.....................Olympia.
W. Va........ H. A. Abbott, Com. of Banking......................Charleston.
E. L. Morrison, Deputy Com. of Banking. .Charleston.
George M. Weekley. Asst. Com...................... Spencer.
“
W. R. Seal, Assistant Commissioner..............Charleston
Marion Workman, Assistant CommissionerKeyser.
“
Harold Sayre, Asst. Com.....................................Letart.
O. S. Summers, Asst. Com................................ Clendennin.
“
Helen S. Barringer, Secretary........................... Charleston.
Alta Wagner, Asst. Secretary.......................... Charleston.
“
W. Ray Tabler, Asst. Com.................................Parkersburg.
Wis.............Dwight T. Parker, Commissioner....................Fennimore.
W. PI. Richards, Deputy Com........................ Black River Falls.
“
Thos. Herreid, Chief Examiner........................ Madison.
“
C. E. Butters, Chief Clerk................................. Madison.
R. B. Ellis, Bank Examiner.............................Madison.
C. P. Diggles, Asst. Examiner.........................Madison.
Chas. T. Shape, Bank Examiner....................Milwaukee.
W. C. Edwards, Bank Examiner....................Madison.
Ernest J. Kuehl, Examiner...............................Eau Claire.
“
G. W. Jamison, Bank Examiner...................... Madison.
“
N. E. Hanshus, Examiner.................................. Eau Claire.
Geo. O. F. Poundstone, Asst. Examiner. . .Mellon.
Omer Houkom, Bank Examiner......................Blair.
“
M. O. Tuhus, Examiner...................................... Viroqua
Jno. E. Mahoney, Examiner............................ Madison.
“
C. M. Morrison, Clerk.........................................Madison.
E. F. Witsig, Examiner......................................Black River Falls.
E. L. Richardson, Examiner............................ Fond du Lac.
Stanley Schafer, Examiner............................... Madison.
Alfred Wall, Bank Examiner........................... Madison.
Gustave Shape, Examiner................................ Madison.
Walter Nyluss, Asst. Examiner...................... Madison.
John Bosshard, Asst. Examiner......................Bangor.
Victor A. Emilson, Clerk.................................. La Crosse.
Thos. M. Pirrtell, Examiner............................ Madison.
Stanley R. Caldwell, Clerk...............................Lodi.
Jos. Donovan, Clerk........................................... Madison.
Wyo...........S. A. Brown, State Examiner............................Cheyenne.
C. F. Dickinson, Examiner...............................Cheyenne.
LeRoy Joyce, Examiner.................................... Cheyenne.
“
W. R. Powers, Examiner.................................... Cheyenne.

13

LIST OF NATIONAL BANK EXAMINERS AND DISTRICTS
January, 1926
Name and Federal
Reserve District

Name and Federal
Reserve District

Hadlock, Gerald B. (7)............ 213 Federal Bldg., Des Moines, Iowa.
Hartman, Chas. H. (3).............1414 Jefferson Bldg., Philadelphia, Pa.
Harwood, E. G. (1) (J.G.). . .Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Boston, Mass.
Hedrick, Gilbar C. (11)........... 312 Magnolia Bldg., Dallas, Texas.
Hess, Grant H. (9)..................... Care of City Insurance Agency, Bismarck,
N. Dak.
Hill, Roger AV. (2)...................... P. O. Box 642, Troy, N. Y.
Hodgson, R. M. (6)....................Room 215, Office of Comptroller of Currency
Treas. Bldg., Washington, D. C.
Hooper, Marshall (12)..............238 Central Bldg., Seattle, Wash.
Hoover, Paul E. (9) (J.G.). . .1334 First National-Soo Line Bldg., Minne­
apolis, Minn.
Horner, H. N. (10).....................P. O. Box 606, Norman, Okla
Hotchkin, Paul L. (2)...............326 Ten Eyck St., Watertown, N. Y.
Hughes, John P. (9) (R.). . . .Care of First Nat’l Bank, Bisbee, N. Dak.
Hurley, Michael J. (1)............. Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Boston, Mass.
Hutt, AVm. E. (11)..................... Sherman, Texas.
Johnson, A. AV. (9) (R.).......... First National Bank, Lidgerwood, N. Dak.
Johnson, C. E. H. (7)............... 331 Federal Bldg., Milwaukee, AVis.
Johnson, Robin M. (R.).......... First National Bank, Hearne, Texas.
Joseph, Edw. M. (7)..................Keegan Apts., 11H AV. Madison St., Danville,
Ill.
Kane, Thos. E. (4)..................... 715 Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Cleveland,
Ohio.
Kane, W. W. (8) J.G.)............1310 Federal Commerce Trust Bldg., St.Louis
Mo.
Kelly. Burdette (9) (R.)..........First National Bank, Torrington, Wyo.
Kennedy, L. G. (10)..................875 S. AVilliams St., Denver, Colo.
Ketner, John H. (3)..................440 Catawissa Ave., Sunbury, Pa.
King, Frank L. (7)..................... P. O. Box 37, Logansport, Ind.
Klein, Benton (2)........................407 AVest 146th St., New York, N. Y.
Krippel, F. AV. (6)...................... 504 Post Office Bldg., Atlanta, Ga.
Lahman, H. S. (10) (R.)......... Farmers & Merchants Nat’l Bank, Fairbury,
Neb.
Lamb, Ernest (11)......................P. O. Box 1062, Austin, Texas.
Lammond, W. M. (6)............... 120 U. S. Custom House, New Orleans, La.
Lanum, H. L. (4)........................ 1117 E. Broad St., Columbus, Ohio.
Leyburn, A. P. (7)......................1203 Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Chicago,

CHIEF NATIONAL BANK EXAMINER
Pole, J. W., Office, Comptroller of Currency, Washington, D. C.

ASSISTANT CHIEF NATIONAL BANK EXAMINERS
Gough, E. H. (11 & 12)...........care of Comptroller of Currency, Washington,
Luce, Frank H. (7 & 9)............care'of Comptroller of Currency, Washington,
D. C.
McBryde, W. W. (5 & 6). . . care of Comptroller of Currency, Washington,
D. C.
Proctor, John L. (8 & 10) .. . .care of Comptroller of Currency, Washington,
D. C.

DISTRICT CHIEF NATIONAL BANK EXAMINERS
(By Federal Reserve Districts)
Bean, Norwin S. (1).................. Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Boston, Mass.
Reeves, Owen T. Jr. (2).......... 720 U. S. Custom House, New York, N. Y.
Newnham, Stephen L. (3)..: .1413 Jefferson Bldg., Philadelphia, Pa.f
Thomas, Thomas C. (4).......... 715 Federal Reserve Bldg., Cleveland, Ohio.
Folger W. P. (5).........................710-715 Bond Bldg., Washington, D. C.
Robb, Ellis D. (6).......................504 Post Office Bldg., Atlanta, Ga.
Sims, Howard M. (7)................1203 Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Chicago,111.
Wood, John S. (8)...................... 1310 Federal Commerce Trust Bldg., St. Louis
Mo.
Patterson, B. K. (9).................. 1334 First National-Soo Line Bldg., Minne­
apolis, Minn.
Roberts, B. K. (10)....................800 Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Kansas City,
Mo.
Collier, Richard H. (11).......... 312 Magnolia Bldg., Dallas, Texas.
Harris, Thos. E. (12).................1103 Alexander Bldg., San Francisco, Calif.

NATIONAL BANK EXAMINERS
Allanson, Edward A. (3)......... 1414 Jefferson Bldg., Philadelphia, Pa.
Allen, Edgar F. (10)..................P. O. Box 1546, Muskogee, Okla.
Allsup, A. S. (7).......................... 1428 N. Main St., Decatur, Ill.
Alvey, John C. (2)......................720 U. S. Custom House, New York.
Amrhein, Joseph A. (5)............510 Ya. Ry. and Power Bldg., Richmond, A a.
Anderson, E. F. (6) (R.)..........First National Bank, Abbeville, Ala.
Armstrong. George E. (10) .. .1226 Downing St., Denver, Colo.
Ashwood, Cecil (5).....................710-715 Bond Bldg., Washington, D. C.
Baker, Wm. B. (3)..................... 1414 Jefferson Bldg., Philadelpnia, Pa.
Baldridge, Wm. H. (12)...........403 Empire State Bldg., Spokane, Wash.
Barrett, John W. (3)................. 1414 Jefferson Bldg., Philadelpnia, Pa.
Basham, A. A. (6)...................... P. O. Box 940, Knoxville, Tenn.
Bina, James C. (9)..................... 201 Security Nat’l Bank Bldg., Sioux Falls,
S. Dak.
Bly, J. Garver (7).......................326 South 15th St., Richmond, Ind.
Boldin, Bernard E. (2)............. P. O. Bldg., Troy, N. Y.
Boysen, Alfred (3)...................... Post Office Bldg., Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
Brennan, F. P. (10) (J.G.) . . . P. O. Box 574, Hutchinson, Kan.
Brown, Samuel H. (10)............ P. O. Box 462, Coffeyville, Kan.
Bryan, Cbas. A. (9)................... 17 Magill Block, Fargo, N. Dak.
Byers, R. W. (4)......................... P. O. Box 1058, Pittsburgh, Pa.
Campbell, Geo. H. (10)........... 203 Majestic Bldg., Denver, Colo.
Carolan, Wm. B. (1)................. Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Boston, Mass.
Carson, Thos. D. (5).................510 Va. Railway & Power Bldg., Richmond,
Va.
Carter, Aubrey B. (U.)............ Room 214, Treasury Dept., Washington, D.C.
Chapman, Edw. L. (10)...........800 Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Kansas City,
Mo.
Chapman, F. A. (11) (R.)....Care of State National Bank, Albuquerque,
N. Mex.
Chorpening, Ira I. (12)............ 1103 Alexander Bldg., San Francisco. Calif.
Clark, Addison A. (4)............... 715 Federal Keserve Bank Bldg., Cleveland,
Ohio.
Cloe, Wm. B. (5).........................P. O. Box 1185, Huntington, W. Va.
Coffin, George M. (1)................71 College St., New Haven, Conn.
Coffin, Gilbert S. (12)............... 2817 Eye St., Sacramento, C alif.
Colley, L. H. (4)..........................715 Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Cleveland,
Ohio.
Collins, L C. (11).......................P. O. Box 444. Palestine, Texas.
Conner, Joseph H. (8).............. 214 Federal Bldg., Evansville, Ind.
Cooney, Dan. H. (4)..................715 Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Cleveland,
Ohio.
Cooper, T A (1)........................ 40 Chapel St., Augusta, Maine.
Cottingham, T. J. (6)...............823 Age-Herald Bldg., Birmingham, Ala.
Cowan, David (11) (R.).......... First National Bank of Las Vegas, E. Las
Vegas, N. Mex.
Crawley, Wm. C. (12)..............436 H. W. Heilman Bldg., Los Angeles, Calif.
Crossen, Gail W. (4)................. P. O. Box 463, Columbus, Ohio.
Culver, William A. (2)............. Davison Place, Baldwin, L. I., N. Y.
Cutts, Arthur D........................... Office Comptroller of Currency, Treas. Bldg.,
Washington, D. C.
Dalton, John W. (5)..................P. O. Box 958, Charlotte, N. C.
Davenport, H. B. (3)................P. O. Box 61, Lancaster, Pa.
Davis, Thomas H. (5).............. P. O. Box 1162, Columbia, S. C.
Denton, Frank R. (10)............ 800 Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Kansas ('ity,
Mo.
Derr. Ralph H. (3)..................... 1414 Jefferson Bldg., Philadelphia, Pa.
Dooley, Thomas E. (1)............ Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Boston, Mass.
Donahue, William H. (10). . . P. O. Box 186, Clinton, Okla.
Drexel, Chas. F. (11)................ 332 P. O. Bldg., Amarillo, Texas.
Dwyer, Thos. E. (9'.................. 1334 First National-Soo Line Bldg., Minne­
apolis, Minn.
Dye Samuel W (8)...................422 AV. Jackson St., Carbondale, Ill.
Elkins, Lewis R. (8)...................732 New St., Springfield, Mo.
Embry, Jacob (11)..................... 312 Magnolia Bldg., Dallas, Texas.
Evans, Clvde J. (6>....................P. O. Box 828. Atlanta, Ga.
Evans, W. C. (12) ....................436 H. W. Heilman Bldg., Los Angeles, Calif.
Faris, A. B. (4)
................. P. O. Box 506, Richmond, Ky.
Farmer. Thurston p. (11) .. . .312 Magnolia Bldg., Dallas, Texas.
Fiman, C. F. (9)..........................1334 First National-Soo Line Bldg., Minne­
apolis, Minn.
Fraser, Jesse A. (9).................... 201 Security National Bank Bldg., Sioux Falls
S. Dak.
Freeman, Otis M. (1)................26 Laurel Ave., Providence, R. I.
Fuller, H. R. (7) (J. G.)............ 1203 P’ederal Reserve Bank Bldg., Chicago.Ill
Funsten, James B. (2)..............720 U. S. Custom House, New York, N. A .
Funsten, Wm. P. (7)................. Box 425, Evanston, Ill.
Furbee, Ernest M. (4)..............P. O. Box 1058, Pittsburgh, Pa.
Garret, Robert D.........................Care of Div. of Insolvent National Banks,
Office of Comptroller of Currency, AVashington, D. C.
Gilbert, H. B. (11)..................... P. O. Box 318, AVichita Falls, Texas,
Glazier, Chas. A. (12) (R.) .. . First National Bank, Rexburg, Idaho.
Goodhart, R. AV. (9) (R.). . . .Care Merchants National Bank, Crookston,
Minn.
Graham. Herbert A. (4)...........509 National Bank Bldg.. Wheeling, W. Va.
Gray, W. M. (12) (It.)............. First National Bank, Joseph, Ore.
Green, A. W. (1) (J.G.)........... Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Boston, Mass.
Greene Thos. M. (1)................ Federal Reserve Bank Bldg.. Boston, Mass.
Greenfield. Jas. B. (7)...............201 Federal Bldg., Peoria, Ill.
Griffev O A. (10)......................800 Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Kansas City,
Mo.


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

Address

Libbv, H. C. (10)....................... P. O. Box 296, Salina, Kan.
Lifsey, AV. P. (6).........................P. O. Box 442, Albany, Ga.
Loewer, Charles (3) (J.G.) . . .1414 Jefferson Bldg., Philadelphia, Pa.
Logan, J. M. (12)....................... 436-437 H. W. Heilman Bldg., Los Angeles,
Calif.
Lorang Peter J. (2)...................Hotel Lenox, Buffalo, N. Y.
Luiken John B. (1)...................Apt. 18, 250 N. Main St., Concord, N. H.
Lytle Frank S. (9).................... Care Paul C. Keyes, Federal Bldg.,Aberdeen,
S. Dak.
McCans, Alexander B. (11). .P. O. Box 1584, AVaco, Texas.
McConaughv, R. C. (3)...........1414 Jefferson Bldg., Philadelphia, Pa.
McCreight, Harrv A. (7)........ 1203 Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Chicago,
McGarvey. Frank S. (9)..........1334 First National-Soo Line Bldg., Minne­
apolis, Minn.
McGinnis F. J. (3)(J. G.). . .1414 Jefferson Bldg., Philadelphia, Pa.
McGrath, John C. (7).............. P. O. Box 592, Indianapolis, Ind.
McKee, Joel S. (4)..................... 733 Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Cleveland,
Ohio.
McLean, Chas. H. (12)............406 Custom House. Portland, Ore.
MacDonald, F. G. (2)..............P. O. Box 926, Buffalo, New York.
Madland, Leland L. (9)...........1334 First National-Soo Line Bldg., Minne­
apolis, Minn.
Maguire Edw. J. (2)................ 720 U. S. Custom House, New York, N. Y.
Mann Stuart H. (8)..................1310 Federal Commerce Trust Bldg., St.Louis,
Mo.
Mansfield, Fred S. (11)............P. O. Box 1067, Fort Worth, Texas.
Marcom Rov (11)..................... 3521 Eutopia St., Greenville, Texas.
Marcuse Benj. (2).....................560 W. 144th St., New York, N. Y.
Miles, Albert F. (5) (U.).........No. 4 Thornton Apt., Redgate Av„ Norfolk,
Va.
Millard S T (6)........................ P. O. Box 822, NashviUe, Tenn.
Miller, Louis A. (10)................. lone Hotel Gnthric Okla
Moon Earl W. (7) ................... 335 Federal Bldg., Rock Island, Ill.
Moore George M. (5)...............P. O. Box 752, Cumberland, Md.
Morgan, Clarence E. (12) (J.G.)238 Central Bldg., Seattle, Wash
Mueller, A. M. (10) (J.G.). . . 800 Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Kansas City,
Mo.
Murphy, Daniel F. (1)............. Brock House Rutland, Vt,
Nelson Nels (9) (J.G.).............1334 First National-Soo Line Bldg., Minne­
apolis, Minn.
Nieman, Roy E. (8)...................1310 Federal Commerce Trust Bldg., St.Louis
Mo.
Noone, D. I . (10) (R.)............ 224 Federal Bldg., Salina Kan.
Norman Harry A. (7)..............1203 Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Chicago.Ill.
Northcutt, V. H. (6)................. P. O. Box 1175, Lakeland, Fla.
Oglesby H. E. (6)......................P. O. Box 1246, Montgomery, Ala.
Otto Chas C (12)....................406 Custom House, Portland, Ore.
Parker Edw F (1)................... Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Boston, Mass.
Pearson Herbert (R.)...............First National Bank, Hayward, Wis.
Peterson, F. R. (10)...................800 Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Kansas City,
Mo.
Potter Fulton F. (7).................110 N. Adams Ave., Mason City, Iowa.
Power’ R E. (9)..........................62 S. Dale St., St. Paul, Minn.
Preuss’ner, Don A. (10)............ General Del., Hastings, Neb.
Price Albert E. (12) (J.G.)...326 Yates Bldg., Boise, Idaho.
Ramsdell, Paul C. (5)...............710-715 Bond Bldg AVashington, D. C.
Rasmussen, Frank E. (2). . . .720 U. S. Custom House. New York, N Y,
Reinholdt, Carl A. (8).............. St. Regis Apt., 495-* Lindell Blvd., St. Louis,
Mo.
Riley Jay M (10) .................... Loveland National Bank, Loveland, Ohio.
Ritt Chas. J. (12) (J.G.). . . .436 IT. W. Heilman Bldg.. Los Angeles, Calif.
Roberts, J. H. (11) (J.G.) ... .312 Magnolia Bldg. Dallas, Texas.
Robinson, E. Robt. (7)............ 651 Kellogg St., S. E„ Grand Rapids, Mich.
Roots J O (11)......................... Care of Federal Reserve Bank, Houston,Texas
Ross, Murdo A. (9)................... 17 Magill Block, Fargo N. Dak.
Ryan Frank J. (1).................... Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Boston, Mass.
Sailor, Vance L. (8)................... 130 W. Adams St., Kirkwood, Mo.
Sanders, J. L. (7)........................ P. O. Box 96, Spencer. Iowa
Sawyer, L. M. (12).................... 436-437 H. W. Heilman Bldg.. Los Angeles.
Calif.
Schechter. Wm. J. (7)...............1812 Burns Ave., Detroit Mich
Schofield, John W. (U.)........... 1539 Hayworth Ave., Hollywood, Calif.
Sevison, Henry (9)..................... 17 Magill Block Fargo, N. Dak.
Shapiror Leo. (12) (J.G.) .. . .1103 Alexander Bldg., San Francisco, Calif
Sheehan, W. F. (9).....................104 Torrey Bldg., Duluth Minn.
Smith,Clarence F.(6) (W.F.C.)Care of Atlanta Agency, Atlanta, Ga.
Smith, Geo. F. (3)...................... P. O. Box 981, Harrisburg, Pa
Smith, Geo. H. (4)..................... P. O. Box 336, West Newton, Pa.
Smith, John H. (9) (R.)...........AVeiser, Idaho.
Smith, Robert F. (2)................. 720 U. S. Custom House, New Aork, N Y.
Smith, Roy E. (10) (R.)..........Care of First National Bank, Sterling, Colo.
Smouse Murray C. (2)............720 U. S. Custom House, New York, N. Y.
Snapp John W. (5)....................710-715 Bond Bldg., Washington, D. C.
Snyder, Vernon G. (3)............. P. O. Box 231, Sunbury, Pa.
Stevens, Lyle T, (9).................. 1334 First National-Soo lane Bldg., Minne­
apolis, Minn.

14

LIST OF NATIONAL BANK EXAMINERS AND DISTRICTS—Continued
Name and Federal
Reserve District

Name and Federal
Reserve District

Address

Wanberg, Joseph F. (7) .
Watts, John L. (2).........
Weigand, Chas. P. (12).
White, A. J. (4)...............
White, O. W. (10)...........

Stewart, Adelia M.......................Offlce^Comptroller of Currency, Washington,
Stewart, Chas. A. (5)............... P. O. Box 63, East Falls Church, Va.
Stillman, Wm. P. (2)................ 720 U. S. Custom House, New York, N. Y.
Stobie, C. A.................................... P. O. Box 313, Honolulu, T. H.
Storing, Chas. C. (9) (R.)... .Lock Box 450, Mandan, N. Dak.
Stuart, Robt. K. (7).................. P. O. Box 536, Waterloo, Iowa.
Swensen, Loren T. (4).............. 715 Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Cleveland.
Ohio.
Swords, Geo. W. (9) (R.). . . .1334 First National Soo-Line Bldg., Minne­
apolis, Minn.
Thompson, K. W. (2)............... 425 Summer Ave., Newark, N. J.
Thorn, Leslie D. (11)............... 2001 Hickory St., Abilene, Texas.
Tripp, Homer S. (4)..................P. O. Box 466, New Castle, Pa.
Tucker, G. H. (5).......................P. O. Box 332, Raleigh, N. C.
Turner, J. W. (10)..................... No. 2 King Bldg., Norfolk, Neb.
Van, John R. (6) (,T. G.) (R.) .Care of First National Bank, Colquitt, Ga.
Von Arb, Edward A. (2)......... 262 Smith Ave., Kingston, N. Y.
Waldron, Walter J. (12).......... 1107 A. Mattei Bldg., Fresno, Calif.
Walker, Harry W. (7)...............1203 Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Chicago,Ill
(J.G.)
(R.)

Williams, T. M. (12). . .
Wilson, Chas. F................
Wilson, Edward B. (7) .
Wood, D. R. (5)..............
Woodside, Hal. (S).........
Wright, Irwin D. (9) . . .
Wylie, Robt. W. (3)....
Young, Wm. R. (8) . . . .

. 1203 Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Chicago,Ill.
.720 U. S. Custom House, New York, N. Y.
.327 Federal Bldg., Pocatello, Idaho.
.P. O. Box 1058. Pittsburgh, Pa.
. 800 Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Kansas City,
Mo.
.720 U. S. Custom House, New York, N. Y.
.238 Central Bldg., Seattle, Wash.
. Commercial National Bank, Wilmington,N.C.
.Care of First National Bank of Fergus Co.,
Lewistown, Mont.
.1103 Alexander Bldg., San Francisco, Calif.
.Office of Comptroller, Washington, D. C.
. P. O. Box 477, Council Bluffs, Iowa.
.Pulaski National Bank Bldg., Pulaski Va.
.2619 Broadway, Little Rock, Ark.
.1334 First National-Soo Line Bldg., Minneeapolis, Minn.
.General Delivery, Reading, Pa.
.407 Central State National Bank Bldg.,
Memphis, Tenn.

National Bank Examiner Junior Grade.
Acting as Receiver of National Bank.

(W.F.C.)
(U.)

Whitney, Harold S. (2).
Wilde, M. C. (12)...........
Williams, C. L. (R.)
Williams, F. D. (9) (R.)

Address

Detailed for temporary duty to War Finance Corporation.

Unassigned.

NOTE:

Unless otherwise indicated the telegraph address is the same as the main address.

Numerical System of the A. B. A.
Iu 1911 the American Bankers Association adopted what is known as the “ Numerical Transit System,” which
has proved of great benefit to the banking world.
The Clearing House Section of the Association, realizing the necessity for a uniform system of bank numbers,
called a meeting in Chicago, December 12 and 13, 1910, to evolve a plan and work out the details of numbering all the
banks in the country. The Executive Council of the American Bankers Association at its meeting in Nashville,
May dIvIIj unanimously adopted the system devised by the committee and authorized the publication of the A. B. A.
KEY BOOK containing the names of the banks and the numbers assigned.

EXPLANATION OF SYSTEM
.
, .The reserve cities \vere each designated by a prefix number, with the exception of Brooklyn, which was
included with New York City, Kansas City, Kan., which was included with Kansas City, Mo., and South Omaha,
which was included with Omaha. Buffalo, N. Y., and Memphis, Tenn., on account of their size and importance as
bankmg centers were included with the reserve cities. The cities were numbered from I to 49, inclusive, in the order
or their, population according to the Government Census of 1910. The lower numbers were thus assigned to the
larger cities.
.The Treasurer and Assistant Treasurers of the United States and the Post Offices were also numbered in
these cities.
The state prefix numbers, together with clearing house numbers, were used in numbering the banks in the
largest city in each state other than the reserve cities, all other cities being designated by the use of the state prefix
and the numbers given to the banks, which are continued in the relative order of the population of the cities in each
state. Each bank is numbered in consecutive order according to seniority in each city or town, excepting in towns
having only one bank, in which case the banks are numbered in alphabetical order according to towns.
Rand McNally & Co. of Chicago, publishers of the Key to Numerical System of The American Bankers
Association, assign numbers to new banks as they are organized and supply, upon request, the number of any bank
which does not appear in the Key, and in March and September each year publish and supply upon request, free of
charge, supplements containing all changes which have taken place since any previous issue of the Key or of any
supplement.
The Ninth Edition will be published in May, 1926.


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

15

VALUES OF FOREIGN COINS

Washington, D. C., Januaryl, 1926.

In pursuance of the provisions of section 25 of the act of August 27, 1894, as amended by Section 403, Title
IV, of the Act of May 27, 1921, and reenacted by section 522, Title IV, Act of September 21, 1922, I hereby
proclaim the following estimate by the Director of the Mint of the values of pure metal contents of foreign coins to
be the values of such coins in terms of the money of account of the United States, to be followed in estimating the
value of all foreign merchandise exported to the United States during the quarter beginning Januaryl, 1926,
expressed in any such metallic currencies: Provided, however, that if no such value has been proclaimed, or if the
value so proclaimed varies by five per centum or more from a value measured by the buying rate in the New
York market at noon on the day of exportation, conversion shall be made at a value measured by such buying
rate, as determined by the Federal Reserve,Bank of New York and published by me as certified by said bank
pursuant to the provisions of said Section 25 as amended.
A. W. Mellon, Secretary of the Treasury.
Values of Foreign Coins
Value in
of
Remarks.
Legal Standard. Monetary Unit. Terms
U. S.
Money.
Peso.
$0.9648 Currency: Paper, normally convertible at 44 per cent
of face value; now inconvertible.
A of lo
Gold
Schilling________
.1407
.1930 Member Latin Union.
Gold and silver.__ Franc___________
.3893 1234 bolivianos equal 1 pound sterling.
Gold____________ Boliviano______ _
.5462 Currency: Government paper a part of which is legally
Milreis__________
convertible atl6 pence (=$0.3244) per milreis.; now
inconvertible.
4.8665
Pound sterling. .
British Colonies in Austral­ Gold
asia and Africa,
1.0000
Dollar
Gold
Gold
.1930
Lev
. _ .
1.0000
Gold____________ Dollar__________
.3650 Currency: Inconvertible paper.
Peso____________
niiilp.
_ ___________ Gold
.8287
''Amoy___
.8262
Canton ....
.7926
Cheefoo ...
.8095
Chin Kiang
.7666
Fuchau___
.8432
Haikwan ..
(customs) .
The tael is a unit of weight; not a coin. The
.7754
Hankow ...
customs unit is the Haikwan tael. The values of
.8030
Tae l-« Kiaochow other taels are based on their relation to the value
.8200
Nanking...
of the Haikwan tael.
Silver__________
.77/1
Niuchwang
The Yuan silver dollar of 100 cents is the monetary
.7968
Ningpo__
unit of the Chinese Republic: it is equivalent to
.8079
Peking___
.044+ of the Haikwan tael.
.7570
Shanghai..
.7655
Swatow.__
.8339
.8030
Tientsin...
.5370
'Hongkong . | .5450
Dol.' British___
Mexican silver pesos issued under Mexican decree of
.5491
.Mexican...
Nov. 13, 1918, are of silver content approximately
41% less than the dollar here quoted; and those
issued under decree of October 27, 1919 contain
about 51% less silver.
Gold.
__ __ Peso
.9733 Currency: Government paper and silver.
Gold... ________ Colon___ — - —
.4653 Law establishing Conversion office fixes ratio 4
colons=$l U. S.
Gold....................— Peso................ ........
1.0000
Gold____________ Krone__________
.2680
Gold______ ______ Dollar__________
1.0000 U. S. money is principal circulating medium.
Gold____________ Sucre___________
.4867
Gold____________ Pound (100 piasters) 4.9431 The actual standard is the British pound sterling, which
Gold................ ........ Kroon
.2680
is legal tender for 974 piasters.
Gold—. ______ Markka_________
.1930
Gold and silver... Franc___________
.1930 Member Latin Union.
Reichsmark...........
Gold
.2382
Pound sterling___
Gold
4.8665
Drachma....... ........
.1930 Member Latin Union.
Gold
Quetzal_________ 1.0000
Gold
Gourde__________
.2000 Currency: National bank notes redeemable on demand
in American dollars.
Peso____________
.5055 Currency, bank notes.
Sovereign.
- 4.8665 ) The British sovereign and half sovereign are legal
(Gold
Rupee
{- tender in India at 10 rupees per sovereign; actual
.2401
) exchange rates approximate 15 rupees.
Piaster
.5459
Gold
Lira
________
.1930 Member Latin Union.
Yen _____ ____
.4985
Gold
.1930
1.0000 Currency: Depreciated silver token coins. Customs
Gold
duties are collected in gold.
Gold
Litas __
.1000 Currency: Notes of the bank of Lithuania, not now
.4985
Gold
convertible.
.4020
Gold
Dollar _____ _____
1.0000
Gold
1.0000
Gold
.2680
Gold
Ralhna
1.0000
Gold
Gold
.9648 Currency: Depreciated Paraguayan paper currency.
(Currency: Silver circulating above its metallic value.
.0931 « Gold coin is a commodity only, normally worth
l double the silver.
Gold
4.8665
Phillippine Islands________ Gold
.5000
Peso____ ____
Gold
.1930
1.0805 Currency: Inconvertible paper.
Gold
.1930
Gold
.5146
Russia__________ ________ Gold
Salvador________________ Gold______ _____
.5000
.3709
Siam____________________ Gold
.1930 Valuation is for gold peseta; currency is notes of the
Spain____________________
bank of Spain.
.5678
Gold_________
Gold
Krona
.2680
Gold
.1930
Gold
.0440 Member Latin.
1.0342 (100 piasters equal to the Turkish £.)
Gold_______
Gold
.1930 Currency: Inconvertible paper.
Yugoslavia
Gold
Dinar---------------.1930


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

COUNTRY.

16

TABLE OF CARDINAL NUMBERS AND COMMERCIAL TERMS IN TEN LANGUAGES

-j

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
30
40
50

ENGLISH.

FRENCH.

GERMAN.

SPANISH.

ITALIAN.

PORTUGUESE.

One.....................
Two...................
Three.................
Four...................
Five...................
Six.......................
Seven .................
Eight .................
Nine...................
Ten.....................
Eleven...............
Twelve...............
Thirteen.............
Fourteen...........
Fifteen...............
Sixteen...............
Seventeen...........
Eighteen.............
Nineteen.............
Twenty...............
Twenty-one........
Thirty...............
Forty.................
Fifty...................

Un.......................
Deux...................
Trois...................
Quatre...............
Cinq...................
Six......................
Sept....................
Huit...................
Neuf...................
Dix.....................
Onze...................
Douze.................
Treize.................
Quatorze...........
Quinze...............
Seize...................
Dix-sept.............
Dix-huit.............
Dix-neuf.............
Vingt..................
Vingt-et-un........
Trente ...............
Quarante...........
Cinquante.........

Ein.....................
Zwei...................
Drei....................
Vier.....................
Ftinf...................
Sechs..................
Sieben.................
Acht...................
Neun...................
Zehn...................
Elf.......................
Zwolf..................
Dreizehn.............
Vierzehn.............
Fiinf zehn...........
Sechzehn...........
Siebzehn.............
Achtzehn...........
Neunzehn...........
Zwanzig.............
Ein und zwanzig.
Dreiszig.............
Vierzig...............
Fiinfzig...............

Uno.....................
Dos.....................
Tres...................
Cuatro...............
Cinco.................
Seis.....................
Siete...................
Ocho...................
Nueve.................
Diez...................
Once...................
Doce...................
Trece .................
Catorce...............
Quince...............
Diez y seis.........
Diez y siete........
Diez y ocho........
Diez y nueve....
Veinte.................
Viente y uno....
Treinta...............
Cuarenta...........
Cincuenta .........

Uno.....................
Due.....................
Tre.....................
Quattro.............
Cinque...............
Sei.......................
Sette...................
Otto...................
Nove...................
Dieci...................
Undici.................
Dodici.................
Tredici.............
Quattordici
Quindici.............
Sedici.................
Diciassetle.........
Diciotto.............
Diciannove........
Venti..................
Venti’uno...........
Trenta ...............
Quaranta...........
Cinquanta..........

Urn.....................
Dois...................
Tres................
Quat,rn . .
Cinco.. .
Seif?
Sete.............
Oit.o.
Nove.. .

Een.
Twee.
Drie.
Vier.
Vyf..
Zes.
Zeve.n
Ae.ht.
Negen.

Onze
Treze . . . .

Elf.........
Twaalf . .
Dertien.
Veert.ien
Vyftien.

60 Sixty................... Soixante............. Sechzig...............
70 Seventy ............. Soixante-dix .... Siebenzig...........
80 Eighty............... Quatre-vingt.... Achtzig...............
90 Ninety............... Quatre-vingt-dix. Neunzig.............
1U0 Hundred............. Cent................... Hundert.............
1000 Thousand........... Mille................... Tausend.............
Day..................... Jour.................... Tag.....................
Week.................. Semaine............. Woehe...............
Month............... Mois................... Monat.................
Year................... Annee................. Jahr....................
On demand........ A presentation. . Nach Sicht, or bei
Vorzeigung.
At sight............. A vue................. Auf Sicht...........
After sight......... A jours de vue .. Nach Sicht.........
After date......... A jours de date.. Nach Dato, or
nach Heute.
Pay to the order. Payez a 1’ordre.. Fvir mich, or uns
an anweisung.
I promise to pay. Je payerai.......... Werde ich, or werdenwirbezahlen
With interest.. .. Avec interets.. .. Mit Zinsen.


https://fraser.stlouisfed.org
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

Quinze ...
Dezeseis. .
Dezessete. . .
Dezoito.. .
Dezeneve
Vinte....
Vinte um....
Trinta.......
Quarenta...........
Oine.oent.a

Sesenta............... Sessanta..........
Sessent.a. .
Setenta............... Settanta............. Setenta...........
Ochenta.............
Noventa.............
Cien...................
MU.....................
Dia.....................
Semana...............
Mes.....................
Ano.....................
A present acion ..

Ottanta.............
Novanta.............
Cento.................
Mille...................
Giorno...............
Settimana..........
Mese...................
Anno...................
A presentazione.

Oitenta...............
Noventa.............
Cem...................
Mil.....................
Dia.....................
Semana...............
Mez....................
Anno..................
A presentacao...

DUTCH.

RUSSIAN.

DANISH.

To

..

Ni
Ti
Tolv

Zeve.n t,ie.n.
Negent.ien

Twe

Oertig..
Veertig.
VvftieT

SWEDISH.

Tv&
Tre
Fyra
Fern .
Sju.................
O
Atta..
Nio..
Tio.
Elfva
Tolf........
Tretton....
Fjort.on . . .
Femton...............
Sexton........
Sjutton .............
Aderton. . .
Nitt.on........
Tjngu.........
Tjuguen...............
Trettio.. .
Fyrt.io.................
Femt.in.

tyve.................
Zevent.ig.
Tae.htig.............
Neeentier ....
Honderd...........
Duizend...........
Dag.................
Week...................
Maanden ....
Jaar....................
Op vertoon........

tyve.

Den.
Ned el a

Sjutiio.................
O

.....................

0
God... .
Po bziskam....... Paa anfordring.. Pa anfordring....

A la vista........... A vista............... A vista........
A.. dias vista.... Dopo vista........ A.. dias vista ... Dagen na zigt.
A. .dias fecha... Dopo dato.......... A.. dias data.... Dagen na dato.. Gato................... Efter dato
A la orden.......... Pagate al l’ordine Pagase a ordem.. Voor my aan de Nlat it order.... Behag at betale Behagar att betaOrder.
til odre.
la till ordre.
Pagare............... Paghero............. Pagarei..
betalan.
at betale.
att betala.
Con interes........ Con interesse.... Com intereses... Met interest.... Is prozentamu... Med rente..........1 Med rfcnta...........

INTEREST RATES, GRACE ON SIGHT DRAFTS, AND STATUTES OF
LIMITATION
For further information see also “ Laws ” of each State, indexed in back of this Volume
INTEREST RATES—NOTES AND
ACCEPTANCES-GRACE
STATES
AND

TERRITORIES.

Legal
Rate
Rate of
by
interest Contract.

Notes and
Acceptances
Due on
Holi- i Half
days. | Days.

Are payable
Per ct. Per cent. and protestable
the day—
Alabama. ..................................
Alaska____ ________ ___ ____
Arizona.______________
Arkansas______ ________ ________ ___________
Colorado— ............................... ................................
Connecticut..___ ___ ________________________
Delaware.. _______________________________
District of Columbia__________________________
Florida .. ____ ___________________________
Georgia ___________ ____ __
Idaho______________________________________
Illinois........................... ..............................................
Indiana ................ .............................. .........................
Iowa_________ ____ ____ ________ _________
Kansas... _______________________ _______ _
Kentucky _ ...
Maine___
_______________________________
Maryland.. ___________________ ___________
Massachusetts...........................................................
Michigan ... _________________ _____________
Minnesota___ ______ _____________ __________
Mississippi—________________________________
Missouri______________ ____________________
Montana ... ________________ ______________
Nebraska
................ ....................... ..................
Nevada .
_________ ___________ _______
New Hampshire_______________ _____________
New Jersey ___ ____________ _______________
New Mexico................................................................
New York.............. ........................................... ........
North Carolina___ __________ ________________
North Dakota.___ _____ ________ _____________
Ohio.......................... ...................................................
Oklahoma.......... ............................. ............................
Oregon .. ....... .........................................................
Pennsylvania....... ............ ............. ............................
Philippine Islands.......................................................

8
8
6
6
7
8
6

8

12
10
10
See®
Any ratet

12

6
6

6
8

8

10

7

8

8

12
10
7

7
5
6
6

6
6
5
6
6
6
5
6
6
6
8

7
7
6
6
6

6
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
6

Rhode Island____ __________ ________________
South Carolina___________ __________________
South Dakota.............................................................

6
7
7
6
6

Utah..............................................................................
Vermont............... .......................... .....................
Virginia........................................................... ..........
Washington_____ ___
West Virginia.................... ..............................
Wisconsin........................................... ................
Wyoming______ ______ _____________
Alberta . ________ _______ ____
British Columbia_______ ___________
Manitoba............................... .........
New Brunswick___________________
Nova Scotia ___ ___ _______________
Ontario..........................................................
Quebec___________________ __
Saskatchewan_____________________

8

6
6
6
6
6
7
5
5
5
5
5
5

8
8

10
6
8

Any rate
6
Any rate!

7
8
8
8

10
10
12
Any rate
6
12
8t
6
10
8

10
10
6
♦
12
Any rate
8

10
6
10
12
6
6
12
6
10
10
Any rate

After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After!
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After!
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After

After
*

After
After
After*
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After!
After
After
After!
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
—
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
After
—

___

Any rate
Any rate

After —

5

5

After
After

Holidays
falling on
Sunday
are
observed
the day—

After
Before
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After
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After
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Alter
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After
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After
After

.... r

Any rate

After

After

_______

STATUTES OF LIMITATIONS

Notes.

Sight

Bills.

Drafts.

No grace
No grace
No grace
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No grace
No grace
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No grace
No grace
No grace
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Grace
Grace
Grace

Notes
and
Open
Judg­
Written ments.
Ac­
Con­
counts.
tracts.

No grace
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No grace
No grace
No grace
No grace
No grace
No grace
No grace
No grace
No grace
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No grace
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No grace
No grace
No grace
No grace
No grace
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No grace
No grace
No grace
No grace
No grace
No grace
No grace
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No grace
No grace
No grace
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Grace [

Years.

Years.

Years.

3

6
6
6

20
10
5
3-10!

6

3
3
4

5
2-4

6

6

6
3
3
3
4

6
6
3
5
6

4
5
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3
2-5
3
6
3
6
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4
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4
6
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6
6
3
6
6

5
10
10
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3-12
6

6

10

6
6
6
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6

4
6

3
3
5
6
8

B
6
8

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6

6
6
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6
6

6
6
6
3
6
15
5
6
6

6
6
6
4
6
6-14

5

6
10
6

10
6
6
6
8
«
6

5
6

Sealed
Instru­
ments
wit­
nessed.
Years.

16
10
6
e
_______
5
6-20!
8-20!
20!
17
10
26
12
12
20
20
20
7
6
20
20
20
5
15
10
20
12
20!
6-10
10
7
10
10
5-10!
6
20
20
7
20
10
10
21
1-6
10
20
10!

5
10
26
10
6
16
10
26
12
20
6
6

6
10
8
5
«
20
16
« 20
10
«
16
6
10
20
10

20
20
6-20
20
20!
10-20
—
10
4
10
8

6

8
10

*
10

•

6

10
10
10-20
10-20
10
5-10
12 ,
2°
20
20
10
10
20
20
20
20
20
20
5-30
30
20
12

* In Denver, Due Saturday during June, July, and August protest Saturday or Monday at option of holder.
t Any rate agreed upon in writing is legal on collateral demand loans of $5000 and over.
11 See laws. Indexed in back of this volume.
©Parties may agree in writing to a higher rate of interest than 7%, but not exceeding 12% for one year, and not exceeding that rate for a longer or
shorter time.
+ Any rate agreed upon is legal, on loans over $300, but Colorado courts decline to endorse grossly unreasonable rates.
♦12% when there is security; 14% when there is no security.
• In the District of Columbia “instruments falling due Saturday are to be presented for payment on the next succeeding business day, except that
instruments payable on demand may, at the option of the holder, be presented for payment before 12 o’clock noon on Saturday, when that entire day is
not a holiday.”—See 1389 District code.


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

18

MBANKERSi
^DIRECTORY!

THE WORLD OVER

HE RAND M?NALLY Bankers
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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

Established 1856,

_________________________


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

LIBRARY
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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

Where to Buy High Grade

Farm Mortgages
Paying Attractive Rates
of Interest
ANY banks and Investment Houses whose
advertisements appear in this Directory are
offering for sale the very best of such securities.

M

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Drop Them a Line


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

Reserves Required to be held by members in Federal Reserve Bank
Banks Not in Reserve or
Central Reserve City
7% of Demand Deposits
3% of Time Deposits

Reserve City Banks
10% of Demand Deposits
3% of Time Deposits

Central Reserve City
Banks
13% of Demand Deposits
3% of Time Deposits

Central Reserve Cities
2. NEW YORK CITY

....

7. CHICAGO

Reserve Cities

Br.2.

11.
Br.10.

Br.9.
Br.ll.
Br.6.
10.
Br.8.
Br.12.
Br.8.
Br.8.

Albany, N. Y.
Atlanta, Ga.
Baltimore, Md.
Birmingham, Ala.
Boston, Mass.
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Buffalo, N. Y.
Cedar Rapids, Iowa
Cincinnati, O.
Cleveland, O.
Columbus, O.
Dallas, Texas
Denver, Colo.
Des Moines, Iowa
Detroit, Mich.
Dubuque, Iowa
El Paso, Texas
Fort Worth, Texas
Galveston, Texas
Grand Rapids, Mich.
Helena, Mont.
Houston, Texas
Indianapolis, Ind.
Jacksonville, Fla.
Kansas City, Kan.
Kansas City, Mo.
Lincoln, Neb.
Little Rock, Ark.
Los Angeles, Cal.
Louisville, Ky.
Memphis, Tenn.
Milwaukee, Wis.

9. Minneapolis, Minn.
Muskogee, Okla.
Br.6. Nashville, Tenn.
Br.6. New Orleans, La.
Oakland, Cal.
Ogden, Utah
Br.10. Oklahoma City,Okla.
Br.10. Omaha, Neb.
Peoria, Ill.
3. Philadelphia, Pa.
Br.4. Pittsburgh, Pa.
Br.12. Portland, Ore.
Pueblo, Colo.
Richmond, Va.
St. Joseph, Mo.
St. Louis, Mo.
St. Paul, Minn.
Salt Lake City,Utah
San Antonio, Texas
12. San Francisco, Cal.
Ag’y 6 .Savannah, Ga.
Br.12. Seattle, Wash.
Sioux City, Iowa
Br.12. Spokane, Wash.
Toledo, Ohio
Topeka, Kan.
Tulsa, Okla.
Waco, Texas .
Washington, D. C.
Wichita, Kan.

Those cities which are preceded by a number are Federal Reserve
Bank cities and the number in each instance is the District number
in which the city is located. Br. signifies that a branch bank is
located in that city. Ag’y signifies that an agency is located in
that city.

19

FEDERAL RESERVE BANK INFORMATION

FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD
WASHINGTON, D. C.

Ex-officio Members
A. W. MELLON, Secretary of the Treasury, Chairman.
J. W. McINTOSH, Comptroller of the Currency.
D. R. CRISSINGER, Governor
EDMUND PLATT, Vice-Governor
ADOLPH C. MILLER

CHARLES S. HAMLIN

GEORGE R. JAMES

EDWARD H. CUNNINGHAM

WALTER WYATT, General Counsel.

WALTER L. EDDY, Secretary.
J. C. NOELL, Assistant Secretary.
e. m.

E. A. GOLDENWEISER, Assistant Director,
Division of Research and Statistics.

McClelland,
Assistant Secretary.

W. M. IMLAY, Fiscal Agent.
E. L. SMEAD, Chief, Division of Bank
Operations.

J. F. HERSON, Chief Federal Reserve
Examiner.

FEDERAL ADVISORY COUNCIL—(1926)
FRANK O. WETMORE,
Chicago, District No. 7
BRECKINRIDGE JONES,
St. Louis, District No. 8
THEODORE WOLD,
Minneapolis, District No. 9
P. W. GOEBEL, Kansas City, District No. 10
B. A. McKINNEY, Dallas, District No. 11
HENRY S. McKEE,
San Francisco, District No. 12

CHARLES A. MORSS, Boston, District No. 1
JAMES S. ALEXANDER,
New York, District No. 2
LEVI L. RUE, Philadelphia, District No. 3
GEORGE A. COULTON,
Cleveland, District No. 4
JOHN F. BRUTON,
Richmond, District No. 5
P. D. HOUSTON, Atlanta, District No. 6


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

*

20

FEDERAL RESERVE BANK INFORMATION

DISTRICT No. 1—Bank Located at Boston

(Transit Number 5-1)

(30 Pearl St.)
TERRITORY IN DISTRICT—Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut,
except Fairfield County. Membership: National Banks 381; State Banks 38.

DIRECTORS
CLASS A:—ALFRED L. RIPLEY (1926), Boston; F. S. CHAMBERLAIN (1928), New Britain, Conn.; EDWARD
S. KENNARD (1927), Rumford, Maine.
CLASS B:—ALBERT C. BOWMAN (1928), Springfield, Mass.; PHILIP R. ALLEN (1926), East Walpole, Mass.;
C. G. WASHBURN (1927), Worcester, Mass.
CLASS C:—FREDERIC H. CURTISS (1926), Boston, Chairman of Board and Federal Reserve Agent; CHARLES
H. MANCHESTER (1928), Providence, R. I.; ALLEN HOLLIS (1927), Concord, N. H., Deputy Chairman.
CHARLES A. MORSS Boston, Mass., Member Federal Advisory Council.

OFFICERS
W. P. G. HARDING, Governor; WILLIAM W. PADDOCK, Deputy Governor; FREDERIC H. CURTISS, Chairman
and Federal Reserve Agent; ALLEN HOLLIS, Deputy Chairman of the Board; CHARLES F. GETTEMY, Assistant
Federal Reserve Agent; WILLIAM WILLETT, Cashier; KRICKEL K. CARRICK, Secretary.
ASSISTANT CASHIERS:—ERNEST M. LEAVITT, L. WALLACE SWEETSER, and ELLIS G. HULT.
HARRY F. CURRIER, Auditor; ARTHUR H. WEED, Counsel.
LIABILITIES

RESOURCES

Capital paid in......................................................................... $ 8,611,000
Surplus....................................................................................... 16,382,000
Government deposits...............................................................
280,000
Due to members—reserve account....................................... 143,492,000
Foreign Bank...........................................................................
161,000
Other deposits.........................................................................
133,000
Total deposits...................................... $144,066,000
Federal Reserve notes in aotual circulation........................ 176,824,000
Deferred availability items................................................... 78,215,000
AD other liabilities...................................................................
1,314,000

TOTAL LIABILITIES


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

$425,412,000

Gold and gold certificates...............................$
Gold settlement fund, F. R. Board..............
Gold with Federal Reserve Agents...............
Gold redemption fund.....................................
Reserves Other than Gold.............................

46,124,000
43,752,000
84,540,000
6,832,000
16,961,000

Total reserve.............................................

$198,209,000

Nonreserve cash.............................................
Bills discounted—secured by Government
obligations....................................................
Bills discounted—all others...........................
Bills bought in open market..........................
U. S. Bonds....................................................
U. S. Treasury Notes....................................
U. S. certificates ofindebtedness.................
Foreign loans on gold...................................
Bank premises..................................................
Uncollected items...........................................
All other resources...........................................

18,841,000
15,801,000
82,047,000
553,000
1,246,000
9,350,000
651,000
4,190,000
90,655,000
100,000

TOTAL RESOURCES

3,769,000

$425,412,000

FEDERAL RESERVE BANK INFORMATION
DISTRICT No. 2

Bank Located at New York City.

(Transit Number 1-120)

(33 Liberty Street)
TERRITORY IN DISTRICT—The State of New York and the following counties in New Jersey: Bergen, Essex,
Budson, Hunterdon, Middlesex, Monmouth, Morris, Passaic, Somerset, Sussex. Union, and Warren and the County of
Fairfield, Connecticut. Membership: National Banks 738; State Banks 56; Trust Companies 91. Total 885.
DIRECTORS
O

A
A
A
B

1 Jackson E. Reynolds, New York City
President, First National Bank
2 Robert H. Treman, Ithaca,_ N. Y.
President, The Tompkins County
National Bank
3 Delmer Runkle, Hoosick Falks, N. Y.
President, Peoples National Bank
1 Owen D. Yoong, New York City
Chairman General Electric Company

a.
§

Term
Expires
Dec. 81

O

1928

B

1926

B
C
C

1927
1928

Term
Expires
Dec. 81

2 Theodore F. Whitmarsh, New York City
President, Francis H. Leggett & Co.,
3 Samuel W. Reyburn, New York City
President Lord & Taylor
Pierre Jay, New York City, Chairman.
William L. Saunders, Plainfield, N. J.,

1926
1927
1928
1926

Deputy Chairman.

Chairman Ingersoll-Rand Company
Clarence M. Woolley, New York City
Chairman, American Radiator Co.

C

1927

MEMBER FEDERAL ADVISORY COUNCIL
James S. Alexander, New York City
OFFICERS
GENERAL OFFICERS
Benj. Strong. Governor

J. Herbert Case. Deputy Governor
Louis F. Sailer, Deputy Governor
Arthur W. Gilbart,
Ray M. C.idney,

George L. Harrison, Deputy Governor
Edwin R Kenzel, Deputy Governor
Jesse H. Philbin, Secretary

Jay E. Crane, Assistant Secretary
L. Randolph Mason, General Counsel
Jesse H. Philbin, Ass’t. Gen. Counsel

Senior Officers
Laurence H. Hendricks, Controller of Fiscal Agency Func­

Controller of Cash and Controller of
Collections
Controller of Loans

Dudley H Barrows,
Charles H. Coe,
Jay E. Crane,
Edwin C. French,
Howard M. Jefferson,

J. Wilson Jones,
Leslie R. Rounds,

tions
Controller of Administration
Controller of Accounts

Junior Officers
Adolph J. Lins,

Manager, Credit and Discount De­
partment
Walter B. Matteson, Manager, Securities Department
Robert M. O’Hara, * Manager, Bill Department
Manager Accounting Department
James M. Rice,
Stephen S. Vansant, Manager, Safekeeping Department
Waters, Manager, Collection Department

Manager,AdministrationDepartment
Manager, Check Department
Manager, Foreign Department
Manager, Cash Department
Manager, Personnel Department
1. Ward

Edward

L. Dodge, General Auditor

FEDERAL RESERVE AGENT
Pierre Jay, Federal Reserve Agent
W. Randolph Burgess, Assistant Federal Reserve Agent
Carl Snyder, General Statistician
George B. Roberts, Manager Reports Department

BUFFALO BRANCH
Directors
Elliott C. McDougal,

Frank W Crandall,

President, National Bank of Westfield, Westfield, N. Y.
Arthur Hough,

President, Marine Trust Company, Buffalo
II. McNulty, Chairman,
President, Pratt & Lambert, Inc., Buffalo, N. Y.
Harry T. Ramsdell,
_ ,
Chairman, Mfrs. and Traders Trust Co., Buffalo
James

President,’ Wiard Plow Company, Batavia, N. Y.
John A Kloepfer,

President, Liberty Bank of Buffalo
Walter

W, Schneckenburger, Managing Director
Officers

Walter W. Schneckenburger, Managing Director
Halsey W. Snow, Jr., Cashier

RESOURCES
Gold and gold certificates............................. $337,044,000
Gold settlement fund F. R. Board............... 186,168,000
Gold with Federal Reserve Agents.............. 380,109,000
Gold redemption fund.................................. 10,876,000
Reserves other than Gold............................. 25,642,000

LIABILITIES
Capital paid in......................................................................... $ 32,190,000
Surplus.......................................................................................

58,749,000

Government deposits...............................................................

533,000

Total reserves................................................................
Non-reserve cash...........................................
Bills discounted—secured by Government
obligations.................................................
Bills discounted—all others.........................
Bills bought in open market.........................
U. S. Bonds..................................................
U. S. Treasury Notes...................................
U. S. certificates of indebtedness.................
Foreign Loans on gold
Due from Foreign banks.............................
Bank premises...............................................
Uncollected items........................................
All other resources........................................

Due to members—reserve aocount....................................... 852,827,000

Foreign Bank.......................................................................

6,813,000

Other deposits.........................................................................
8,965,000
Total deposits.......................................... $869,138,000
Federal Reserve notes in actual circulation......................... 369,551,000
Deferred availability items..................................................... 178,490,000
All other liabilities...................................................................
4,512,000

TOTAL RESOURCES.........................

TOTAL LIABILITIES.............................................. $1,512,630,000


https://fraser.stlouisfed.org
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

Clifford L. Blakeslee. Assistant Cashier
Elmer L. Theobald, Assistant Cashier

22

$939.839.000
16,594,000
103,177.000
43,490,000
17,908,000
16,419,000
32,286,000
91,182.000
2,376,000
710,000
17,261,000
228,153,000
3,235,000

$1,512,630,000

FEDERAL RESERVE BANK INFORMATION
DISTRICT No. 3—Bank Located at Philadelphia. (Transit Number 3-4)
(925 Chestnut'Street)

TERRITORY IN DISTRICT—Delaware, the following counties of New Jersey: Atlantic, Burlington, Camden,
Cape May, Cumberland, Gloucester, Mercer, Ocean, and Salem, and all Pennsylvania east of western boundary of
following counties: McKean, Elk, Clearfield, Cambria, and Bedford. Membership: National Banks 672; State Banks 72.
DIRECTORS
CLASS A:—JOS. WAYNE, JR. (1926), Philadelphia; FRANCIS DOUGLAS (1927), Wilkes Barre, Pa.; JOHN
C. COSGROVE (1928). Johnstown, Pa.
CLASS B:—ALBA B. JOHNSON (1928), Philadelphia; EDWIN S. STUART (1926), Philadelphia; CHARLES K.
HADDON (1927), Haddonfield, N. J.
CLASS C:—RICHARD L. AUSTIN (1926), Philadelphia, Chairman of Board; HARRY L. CANNON (1928),
Bridgeville, Del.; CHAS. C. HARRISON (1927), Philadelphia., Deputy Chairman of Board.
OFFICERS
GEO. W. NORRIS, Governor; WILLIAM H. HUTT, Deputy Governor; EDWIN S. STUART, Deputy Governor;
C. A. McILHENNY, Cashier and Secretary.
ASSISTANT CASHIERS:—W. J. DAVIS, JAMES M. TOY, R. M. MILLER, Jr., F. W. LABOLD and
S. R EARL.
RICHARD L. AUSTIN, Federal Reserve Agent; ARTHUR E. POST, Assistant Federal Reserve Agent.
LEVI L. RUE, Philadelphia, Member Federal Advisory Council; WM. G. McCREEDY, Comptroller.

LIABILITIES
* 11,616,000

Capita) paid in

20,059,000

Surplus fund
Government deposits..........................................................

154,000

Due to members—reserve account...................................

136,281,000

Foreign bank........................................................................

202,000

Other deposits.....................................................................

628,000

Total deposits...............................................$137,265,000
/

Federal Reserve notes in actual circulation....................

158,573,000

Deferred availability items................................................

80,190,000

All other liabilities...............................................................

849,000

TOTAL LIABILITIES

RESOURCES
Gold coin and certificates.............................. $ 17,229,000
Gold settlement fund, F. R. Board.............. 55,540,000
Gold with Federal Reserve Agents............... 136,087,000
Gold redemption fund.................................... 14,080,000
Reserves Other than Gold............................
4,580,000
Total........................................................
Non-reserve cash............................................
Bills discounted—secured by Government
obligations....................................................
Bills discounted—all others...........................
Bills bought in open market..........................
U. S. bonds.......................................
U. S. Treasury notes......................................
U. S. certificates of indebtedness................
Other securities...............................................
Foreign Loans on Gold...................................
Bank premises.................................
Uncollected items...........................................
All other resources...........................................

$227,516,000
951,000

TOTAL RESOURCES..........................

$408,552,000

$408,552,000

DISTRICT No. 4—Bank Located at Cleveland.

34,056,000
22,200,000
12,749,000
604,000
3,507,000
14,728,000
3,050,000
818,000
1,386,000
86,611,000
376,000

(Transit Number 6-1)

(Federal Reserve Bank Bldg.—East Sixth and Superior Sts.)

TERRITORY IN DISTRICT—State of Ohio, all that part of Pennsylvania west of the eastern boundaries of the
following counties: Warren, Forest, Jefferson, Indiana, and Somerset, the counties of Marshall, Ohio, Brooke, Tyler,
Wetzel, and Hancock in the State of West Virginia, and all that part of the State of Kentucky located east of the western
boundary of the following counties: Boone, Grant, Scott, Woodford, Jessamine, Garrard, Lincoln, Pulaski, and McCreary.
Membership: National Banks 747; State Banks 115.
DIRECTORS
CLASS A:—ROBERT WARDROP (1926), Pittsburgh; CHESS LAMBERTON (1928), Franklin, Pa.; 0. N. SAMS
(1927), Hillsboro, Ohio.
CLASS B:—R. P. WRIGHT (1928), Erie, Pa.; JOHN STAMBAUGH (1927), Youngstown, Ohio; G. D. CRABBS
(1926), Lockwood. Ohio.
CLASS C:—GEORGE DE CAMP (1926), Cleveland, Chairman of Board; L. B. WILLIAMS (1928), Cleveland, Ohio,
Deputy Chairman of Board; W. W. KNIGHT (1927), Toledo, Ohio.
GEO. A. COULTON, Cleveland, Ohio, Member Federal Advisory Council.
OFFICERS
E. R. Fancher, Governor
Chairman of Board and Federal Reserve
M. J. Fleming, Deputy Governor
Agent
F. J. Zurlinden, Deputy Governor
Wm. H. Fletcher, Assistant Federal Reserve Agent and
H. F. Strater, Cashier and Secretary
Manager, Department of Examination
W. F. Taylor, Assf. Cashier
J. B. Anderson, Assistant Federal Reserve Agent and
C. W. Arnold, Asst. Cashier
Manager Statistical Department.
G. H. Wagner, Asst. Cashier
G. A. Stephenson, Manager Bank Relations Depart­
D. B. Clouser, Asst. Cashier
ment
C. L. Bickford, AssL Cashier
P V. Grayson. Auditor

George De Camp,

CINCINNATI BRANCH.

(Transit Number 13-43)

(Fourth and Walnut)

P. J. FAULKNER, Assistant Federal Reserve Agent; L. W. MANNING, Managing Director; B. J. LAZAR, Cashier;
JOHN P. H. BREWSTER, Assistant Cashier; H. N. OTT, Assistant Cashier.
DIRECTORS
A. E. ANDERSON, CHAS. W. DUPUIS, JOHN OMWAKE, A. CLIFFORD SHINKLE, and L. W. MANNING,
Cincinnati; E. S. LEE, Covington, Ivy.; GEO. M. VERITY, Middletown, O.

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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

23

FEDERAL RESERVE BANK INFORMATION
(District No. 4. Continued from page 23)
PITTSBURGH BRANCH. (Transit Number 8-30)
(Liberty Avenue and Anderson Street)

T. M. JONES, Assistant Federal Reserve Agent; J. C. NEVIN, Managing Director; THOS. C. GRIGGS, Cashier;
P. A. BROWN, Assistant Cashier; F. E. COBUN, Assistant Cashier.
DIRECTORS
R. B. MELLON, CHAS. W. BROWN, JAMES D. CALLERY, A. E. BRAUN, AND J. C. NEVIN, Pittsburgh;
J. R. EISAMAN, Greensburg, Pa.; JOSEPH R. NAYLOR, Wheeling, W. Va.
LIABILITIES
Capital paid in ....................................................................... $ 13,141,000
Surplus fund..............................................................................

22,462,000

Government deposits...............................................................

766,000

RESOURCES
Gold coin and certificates.............................. $ 46,827,000
Gold settlement fund...................................... 58,157,000
Gold with Federal Reserve Agents............... 181,704,000
Gold redemption fund...................... .............
2,243,000
Reserves other than Gold..............................
7,842,000

Due to members—reserve account....................................... 186,482,000
Foreign Bank...........................................................................

232,000

AH other deposits.....................................................................

1,522,000

Total Deposits.......................................$189,002,000
Federal Reserve notes in actual circulation........................ 232,510,000
Deferred availability items.....................................................

70,632,000

All other liabilities...................................................................

1,915,000

TOTAL LIABILITIES................................................. $529,662,000

Total reserve............................................
Non-reserve cash.............................................
Bills discounted—secured by Government
obligations....................................................
Bills discounted—all other.............................
Bills bought in open market..........................
U. S. Bonds.......................................................
U. S. Treasury Notes...................................
U. S. certificates of indebtedness .................
Foreign Loans on Gold.................................
Bank premises..................................................
Uncollected items...........................................
All other resources...........................................

$296,773,000
3,190,000

TOTAL RESOURCES..........................

$529,662,000

DISTRICT No. 5—Bank Located at Richmond.

58,291,000
43,850,000
7,260,000
8,104,000
17,608,000
3,010,000
942,000
7,681,000
81,946,000
1,007,000

(Transit Number 68-3)

(9th & Franklin Sts.)
TERRITORY IN DISTRICT—District of Columbia, Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and all
West Virginia except the counties of Marshall, Ohio, Brooke, Tyler, Wetzel, and Hancock.
Membership: National Banks 545; State Banks 56.
DIRECTORS
CLASS A:—L. E. JOHNSON (1926), Alderson, W. Va.; CHAS. E. RIEMAN (1927), Baltimore, Md.; JAMES C.
BRASWELL (1928), Rocky Mount, N. C.
CLASS B:—EDMUND STRUDWICK (1927), Richmond; EDWIN C. GRAHAM (1928), Washington, D. C.,
DAVID R. COKER (1926), Hartsville, S. C.
CLASS C:—W. W. HOXTON (1926), Richmond, Chairman of Board; ROBERT LASSITER (1928), Charlotte,
N. C.; FREDERIC A. DELANO (1927), Washington, D. C.
JOHN F. BRUTON, Wilson, N. C. Member Federal Advisory Council.
%

OFFICERS
GEORGE J. SEAY, Governor; CHAS. A. PEPLE, Deputy Governor; R. H BROADDUS, Deputy Governor; J. S. WALDEN;
Jr., Controller; GEORGE H. KEESEE, Cashier; ALBERT S. JOHNSTONE, Manager, Personnel and Service Depart­
ment; JOHN T. GARRETT, Manager, Bank Relations Department; HUGH LEACH, Auditor;W. W. DILLARD, Assistant
Cashier; EDWARD WALLER, Jr., Assistant Cashier; GEORGE S. SLOAN, Assistant Cashier; MAXWELL G.
WALLACE, Counsel; W. W. HOXTON, Chairman of the Board and Federal Reserve Agent; J. G. FRY, Assistant Federal
Reserve Agent.

BALTIMORE BRANCH.

(Transit Number 7-27)

(South and Redwood Sts.)
A. H. DUDLEY, Managing Director; M. F. REESE, Cashier; THOMAS I. HAYS, Assistant Cashier; JOHN R.
CUPIT, Assistant Cashier.
DIRECTORS
A. H. DUDLEY, Managing Director; H. B. WILCOX, C. G. OSBURN, JOHN G. ROUSE, and W. H.
MATTHAI, Baltimore; EDMUND P. COHILL, Hancock; LEVI B. PHILLIPS, Cambridge.
LIABILITIES
Capital paid in......................................................................... $

5,979,000

Surplua.......................................................................................

11,701,000

Government deposits...............................................................

13,000

Due to members—reserve account.......................................

69,268,000

Foreign Bank...........................................................................

115,000

All other deposits.....................................................................

163,000

RESOURCES
Gold and gold certificates.............................. $ 6,158,000
Gold settlement fund, F. R. Board.............. 30,602,000
Gold with Federal Reserve Agents............... 72,147,000
Gold redemption fund.....................................
2,616,000
Reserves other than Gold..............................
4,708,000

Total deposits...................................... $69,559,000
Federal Reserve notes in actual circulation.........................

92,563,000

Deferred availability items.....................................................

72,501,000

All other liabilities...................................................................

1,095,000

TOTAL LIABILITIES.................................................$253,398,000


https://fraser.stlouisfed.org
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

24

Total reserve............................................
Non-reserve Cash...........................................
Bills discounted—secured by Government
obligations................
Bills discounted—all other.............................
Bills bought in open market..........................
U. S. Bonds.......................................................
U. S. Treasury Notes...................................
U. S. Certificates of indebtedness...............
Foreign Loans on Gold...............................
BanK premises..................................................
Uncollected items.........................................
All other resources..........................................

$ 116,231,000
3,154,000

TOTAL RESOURCES..........................

$253,398,000

14,682,000
30,181,000
3,350,000
1,240,000
2,726,000
892,000
466,000
2,446,000
77,653,000
377,000

FEDERAL RESERVE BANK INFORMATION
DISTRICT No. 6—Bank Located at Atlanta.

(Transit Number 64-14)

TERRITORY IN DISTRICT—Alabama, Georgia, Florida, all Tennessee east of the western boundary of the follow­
ing counties: Stewart, Houston, Humphreys, Perry, and Wayne; all Mississippi south of the northern boundary of the
following counties: Issaquena, Sharkey, Yazoo, Madison, Leake, Neshoba, and Kemper; all Louisiana, south of the
northern boundaries of the parishes of Vernon, Rapides, and Avoyelles.
Membership: National Banks 390; State Banks 116.
DIRECTORS
CLASS A:—E. R. BLACK (1927), Atlanta, Ga.; PETER R. KITTLES (1926), Sylvania, Ga.; E. C. MELVIN
(1928), Selma, Ala.
CLASS B:—LEON C. SIMON (1926), New Orleans, La.; J. A. McCRARY (1927), Decatur, Ga.; W. H.
HARTFORD (1928), Nashville, Tenn.
CLASS C:—OSCAR NEWTON (1926), Atlanta, Ga., Chairman; W. H. KETTIG (1928), Birmingham, Ala.,
Deputy Chairman; LINDSEY HOPKINS (1927), Atlanta, Ga.
P. D. HOUSTON, Nashville, Tenn., Member Federal Advisory Council.
OFFICERS
M. B. WELLBORN, Governor; J. L. CAMPBELL, Deputy Governor; CREED TAYLOR, Deputy Governor: M. W.
BELL, Cashier; R. A. SIMS, H. F. CONNIFF, J. B. TUTWILER, Assistant Cashiers; OSCAR NEWTON, Chair­
man of the Board and Federal Reserve Agent; WARD ALBERTSON, Assistant Federal Reserve Agent and Secretary of the
Board of Directors; W. S. JOHNS, General Auditor; J. W. HONOUR, Assistant Auditor; RANDOLPH & PARKER,
General Counsel.
_______________

NEW ORLEANS BRANCH.

(Transit Number 14-21)

DIRECTORS
LEON C. SIMON, Chairman; MARCUS WALKER, J. P. BUTLER, JR., P. H. SAUNDERS, R. S. HECHT,
New Orleans, La.; F. W. FOOTE, Hattiesburg, Miss.; A. P. BUSH, Mobile, Ala.
OFFICERS
Managing Director; W. H. BLACK, Assistant Manager; J. A. WALKER, Cashier; F. C.
VAol HiKLlNGr, Assistant Cashier; W. E. MILLER, Assistant Federal Reserve Agent and Assistant Auditor.

BIRMINGHAM BRANCH.

(Transit Number 61-19)

DIRECTORS
W.H.KETTIG, Chairman; ALEX E. WALKER, OSCAR WELLS, W. E. HENLEY, W. W. CRAWFORD, J. H.
FRYE, Birmingham, Ala.; JOHN P. KOHN, Montgomery, Ala.
OFFICERS
ALEX. E. WALKER, Managing Director; H. J. URQUHART, Cashier; T. N. KNOWLTON, Assistant Cashier.

JACKSONVILLE, Fla., BRANCH.

(Transit Number 63-19)

DIRECTORS
^FULTON SAUSSEY, Chairman; GEORGE R. DeSAUSSURE, EDW. W. LANE, C. P. KENDALL, JOHN C
COOPER, Jacksonville, Fla.; G. G. WARE, Leesburg, Fla.; L. C. EDWARDS, Tampa, Fla.
OFFICERS
GEORGE R. DeSAUSSURE, Managing Director; W. S. McLARIN, Jr., Cashier; GEO. J. WHITE, Assistant
asraer.

NASHVILLE BRANCH.

(Transit Number 87-10)

DIRECTORS
W. H. HARTFORD, Chairman; JOEL B. FORT, JR., E. A. LINDSEY, J. E. CALDWELL, PAUL M. DAVIS
Nashville, Tenn.; T. A. EMBREY, Winchester, Tenn.; WM. P. RIDLEY, Columbia, Tenn.
OFFICERS
JOEL B. FORT, JR., Managing Director; E. C. HUGGINS, JR., Cashier; L. W. STARR, Assistant Cashier.

SAVANNAH AGENCY.

(Transit Number 38-49)

R. N. GROOVER, Manager; JAS. A. GOETHE, Acting Assistant Manager.

HAVANA AGENCY
L. L. MAGRUDER, Manager; H. C. FRAZER, Assistant Manager.
MEMBER FEDERAL ADVISORY COUNCIL
P. D. HOUSTON, Nashville, Tenn.
LIABILITIES

RESOURCES

Capital paid in......................................................................... $ 4,646,000

Gold and gold certificates.............................. $ 3,611,000
Gold settlement fund, F. R. Board.............. 33,024,000
Gold with Federal Reserve Agents............... 92,895,000
Gold redemption fund.....................................
4,928,000
Reserve other than Gold................................
6,508,000
Total reserve............................................
140,966,000
Non-reserve cash...........................................
2,502,000
Bills discounted—secured by
obligations....................................
5,715,000
Bills discounted—all other............
22,076,000
Bills bought in open market..........
66,038,000
U. S. bonds......................................
981,000
U. S. Treasury notes......................
7,873,000
U. S. certificates of indebtedness.
4,157,000
Foreign Loans on Gold..................
360,000
Bank premises.................................
2,791,000
Uncollected items...........................
49,864,000
Other resources..............................
2,125,000

Surplus.......................................................................................

8,950,000

Government deposits...............................................................

443,000

Due to members—reserve account.......................................

83,714,000

Foreign banks...........................................................................

89,000

All other deposits.....................................................................

323,000

Total deposits. ................................................... $84,569,000
Federal Reserve notes in actual circulation......................... 163,085,000
Deferred availability items.....................................................

42,707,000

All other liabilities...................................................................

1,491,000

TOTAL LIABILITIES.................................................$305,448,000


https://fraser.stlouisfed.org
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

TOTAL RESOURCES.

25

$305,448,000

FEDERAL RESERVE BANK INFORMATION
DISTRICT No. 7—Bank Located at Chicago.

(Transit No. 2-30)

(230 La Salle St.)

TERRITORY IN DISTRICT—State of Iowa, all that part of Wisconsin in the counties of Vernon, Monroe, Jackson,
Clark, Marathon, Langlade, Oconto, and Marinette, together with all the counties lying east and south of these countiesj
all of the southern peninsula of Michigan, viz.: that part east of Lake Michigan; all that part of Illinois located north of
a line forming the southern boundary of the following counties: Hancock, Schuyler, Cass, Sangamon, Christian, Shelby,
Cumberland, and Clark; and all that part of Indiana north of a line forming the southern boundaries of the following
counties: Vigo, Clay, Owen, Monroe, Brown, Bartholomew, Jennings, Ripley, and Ohio.
Membership: National Banks 1064; State Banks 371.
DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS
Class A—Directors

Loans and Credits

CHARLES H. McNIDER, Mason City. Iowa (1928)
GEORGE M. REYNOLDS. Chicago. Ill. (1927)
ELBERT L. JOHNSON. Waterloo, Iowa (1926)

KENT C. CHILDS, Controller of Loans and Credits
ALLEN R. LeROY, Manager, Loans
EUGENE A. DELANEY, Manager, Credit Department
JOSEPH C. CALLAHAN, Manager, Member Bank Ac­
counts Department.

I
Class B—Directors

STANFORD T. CRAPO, Detroit, Mich. (1928)
AUGUST H. VOGEL. Milwaukee, Wis. (1927)
ROBERT MUELLER, Decatur Ill, (1926)

Investments

ALBA W. DAZEY, Manager, Investment Department

Class C—Directors

Cash and Custodies

OTTO J. NETTERSTROM, Controller of Cash and
Custodies
JESSE G. ROBERTS, Manager, Cash Department
ROBERT E. COULTER, Manager, Cash Custody Dept.
FRED BATEMAN, Manager, Securities Department

FRANK C. BALL, Muncie, Ind. (1928)
WILLIAM A. HEATH. Evanston, Ill. (1927)
JAMES SIMPSON, Chicago, Ill. (1926)
Officers

WILLIAM A. HEATH, Chairman and Federal Reserve
Agent
JAMES SIMPSON. Deputy Chairman
WILLIAM H. WHITE, Assistant Federal Reserve Agent
and Secretary of Board.
FRANK M. HUSTON, Manager Division of Research
and Statistics
FRANCIS R. BURGESS, Auditor
WALTER A. HOPKINS, Assistant Auditor
CHARLES L. POWELL, Counsel
FRANK O. WETMORE, Chicago, Ill., Member Federal

Collections

WILLIAM C. BACHMAN, Controller of Collections
IRVING FISCHER. Manager, Check Dept.
LOUIS G. PAVEY, Manager, Collection Department
Administration

JAMES H. DILLARD, Controller of Administration
ROBERT J. HARGREAVES, Manager, Personnel De­
partment
LOUIS G. MEYER, Manager, Service Department
FRANK A. LINDSTEN, Manager, Disbursing Dept.
RICHARD C. HUELSMAN, Manager, Planning Dept.

Advisory Council

Banking Officials
Fiscal Agency

JAMES B. McDOUGAL, Governor
JOHN H. BLAIR, Deputy Governor
CHARLES R. McKAY, Deputy Governor

DON A. JONES, Controller of Fiscal Agency Functions

DETROIT BRANCH.

(Transit No. 9-29)

(128 W. Congress St.)
GEORGE T. JARVIS, Assistant Auditor
WILLIAM R. CATION, Manager
JOHN B. DEW, Cashier
HARLAN J. CHALFONT, Assistant Cashier
HENRY M. BUTZEL, Assistant Counsel

Directors

N. P. HULL
GEORGE B. MORLEY
JAMES INGLIS
WILLIAM J. GRAY
JOHN W. STALEY
HARRY H. BASSETT
WILLIAM R. CATION, Managing Director
Officers

JOHN G BASKIN, Asst. Federal Reserve Agent

RESOURCES

LIABILITIES

Gold and gold certificates.............................$ 64,800,000
Gold settlement fund, F. R. Board.............. 134.541,000
Gold with Federal Reserv « Agents.............. 114,736,000
Gold redemption fund..................................
2,589,000
Reserves other than gold............................. 14,707,000

Capital paid in..................................................................... $ 15,722,000
Surplus................................................................................... 30,426,000
Government deposits...........................................................
442,000
Due to members—reserve account..................................... 336,499,000

Total reserve..........................................
Non-reserve cash..........................................
Bills discounted—secured by Government
obligations.................................................
Bills discounted—all other...........................
Bills bought in open market........................
U. S. bonds..................................................
U. S. Treasury notes...................................
U. S. certificatesofindebtedness.................
Bank premises..............................................
Foreign Loans on gold..............................
Uncollected items.........................................
All other resources........................................

Foreign bank.........................................................................
299,000
All other deposits.................................................................
1,251,000
Total deposits....................................$338,491,000
Federal Reserve notes in actual circulation....................... 161,112,000
Deferred availability items.................................................. 113,414,000
All other liabilities...............................................................

2,381,000

TOTAL RESOURCES

TOTAL LIABILITIES.............................................. $661,546,000


https://fraser.stlouisfed.org
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

26

$ 331,373,000
6,096,000
55,089,000
42,495,000
29,721,000
20,252,000
17,868,000
12,565,000
8,099,000
1,214,000
134,776,000
1,998,000
$661,546,000

FEDERAL RESERVE BANK INFORMATION
DISTRICT No. 8

Bank Located at St. Louis.

(Transit Number 4-4)

TERRITORY IN DISTRICT—Arkansas, all Missouri east of the western boundary of the following counties:
arrxson, Daviess, Caldwell, Ray, Lafayette, Johnson, Henry, St. Clair, Cedar, Dade, Lawrence, and Barry; all Illinois
Kiuth of the northern boundaries of the following counties: Adams, Brown, Morgan, McCoupin, Montgomery, Fayette,
Emngham, Jasper, and Crawford; all Indiana south of the northern boundaries of the following counties: Sullivan, Greene,
Lawrence, Jackson, Scott, Jefferson, and Switzerland • all Kentucky west of the eastern boundaries of the following counties:
Cal atm,, C wen, Franklin, Anderson, Mercer, Boyle, Casey, Russell, and Wayne; all Tennessee west of the eastern boundaries
of the following counties: Henry, Benton, Decatur, and Hardin; and all Mississippi north of the southern boundaries of the
following counties: Washington, Holmes, Attala, Winston, Noxubee, and Humphreys.
Membership: National Banks 498; State Banks 130.
DIRECTORS
MARGIN (lgTs^Sdem'IU°NSDALE U926)’ St' L°UiS; J‘ C‘ UTTERBACK U927), Paducah, Ky.; JOHN C.
CLASS B:—ROLLA WELLS (1927), St. Louis; WILLIAM B. PLUNKETT (1928), Little Rock, Ark.; LE ROY
PERCY (1926), Greenville, Miss.
Rnmvn?
McC,-, MARTIN (1927), St. Louis, Chairman of Board and Federal Reserve Agent; JOHN W.
BOEHNE (1926), Evansville, Ind., Deputy Chairman; C. P. J. MOONEY (1928), Memphis, Tenn.
BRECKINRIDGE JONES, St. Louis, Mo., Member Federal Advisory Council.
OFFICERS
WM. McC. MARTIN, Chairman of the Board and Federal Reserve Agent; C. M. STEWART. Assistant Federal Reserve
Gove™°r> 0™ M- ATTEBERY, Deputy Governor; JAMES G. McCONKEY, Secretary and Counsel;
£
SP1, Cashier; A. H. HAILL, J. W. RINKLEFF, W. H. GLASGOW, S. F. GILMORE, E. C. ADAMS, and
Y IN. HALL, Assistant Cashiers; E. J. NOVY, General Auditor; H. L. TRAFTON and E. I. NOWOTNY, Assistant

LITTLE ROCK BRANCH.

(Transit Number 81-13)

n A- F. BAILEY, Managing Director; M. H LONG, Cashier, CLIFFORD WOOD, Assistant Cashier; F. P. MAGUIRE,
Branch Auditor.
’
DIRECTORS
SON* a^d1 MOORHEADIWRiGHTIPBELL> J°HN M‘ DAVIS> W' A' HICKS> HAMP WILLIAMS, STUART WIL-

LOUISVILLE BRANCH. (Transit Number 21-59)
■ P- KINCHELOE, Managing Director; JOHN T. MOORE, Cashier; EARL R. MUIR, Assistant Cashier.; L. A.
MOORE, Branch Auditor.
DIRECTORS
WILLIAM BLACK, ATTILLA COX, EUGENE E. HOGE, W. P. KINCHELOE, MAX B. NAHM, EMBRY L.
SWEARINGEN, and E. H. WOODS.

MEMPHIS BRANCH.

(Transit Number 26-3)

Managing. Director; S. K. BELCHER, Cashier; C. E. MARTIN, Assistant Cashier.; A. E. DEBRECHI, Branch Auditor.
DIRECTORS
E M ALLEN, V. S. FUQUA, J. D. McDOWELL, S. E. RAGLAND, T. K. RIDDICK, R. B. SNOWDEN
and J. W. VANDEN.

LIABILITIES

RESOURCES

Capital paid in......................................................................... $ 5,127,000
Surplus fund.............................................................................

9,971,000

Government deposits.......................... ..................................

1,121,000

Due to members—reserve account.......................................

81,042,000

Foreign bank.............................................................................

100,000

All other deposits.....................................................................

1,216,000

Gold and gold certificates.............................. $
Gold settlement fund, F. R. Board................
Gold with Federal Reserve Agents...............
Gold redemption fund.....................................
Reserves other than gold..............................
Total reserve............................................
Non-reserve cash.............................................
Bills discounted—Secured by Government
obligations.....................................................
Bills discounted—all other.............................
Bills bought m open market..........................
U. S. Government Bonds............................
U. S. Treasury Notes....................................
U. S. certificates of indebtedness.................
Foreign Loans on Gold...................................
Bank premises.............................................
Uncollected items............................................
All other resources...........................................

Total deposits.......................................$83,479,000
Federal Reserve notes in actual circulation........................

39,140,000

Deferred availability items.....................................................

44,123,000

All other liabilities...................................................................

881,000

TOTAL LIABILITIES


https://fraser.stlouisfed.org
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

$182,721,000

TOTAL RESOURCES

27

11,013,000
18,871,000
14,988,000
1,215,000
10,276,000
$56,363,000
2,705,000
9,766,000
12,818,000
32,408,000
1,746,000
11,849,000
4,196,000
405,000
4,627,000
45,475,000
363,000
$182,721,000

FEDERAL RESERVE BANK INFORMATION

DISTRICT No. 9—Bank Located at Minneapolis.

(Transit Number 17-8)

(Location—73 So. Fifth St.)
TERRITORY IN DISTRICT—Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Minnesota, all Wisconsin in the counties:
La Crosse, Trempealeau, Eau Claire, Chippewa, Taylor, Lincoln, Oneida, Forest, and Florence, and all the counties lying
north and west of these and the northern peninsula of Michigan.
Membership: National Banks 773; State Banks 85.
THEODORE WOLD, Minneapolis, Minn. Member Federal Advisory Council.
DIRECTORS
CLASS A:—P. J. LEEMAN (1928), Minneapolis; J. C. BASSETT (1926), Aberdeen, S. D.; W. C. McDOWELL
(1927), Marion, N. Dak.
CLASS B:—PAUL N. MEYERS (1928), St. Paul; N. B. HOLTER (1926), Helena, Mont.; JOHN S. OWEN (1927),
Eau Claire, Wis.
CLASS C:—HOMER P. CLARK (1927), Deputy Chairman, St. Paul; GEO. W. McCORMICK (1928), Menominee,
Mich.
OFFICERS
R. A. YOUNG, Governor; W. B. GEERY, Deputy Governor; B. V. MOORE, Deputy Governor; HARRY YAEGER,
Assistant Deputy Governor; FRANK C. DUNLOP, Controller; GRAY WARREN, Cashier; L. E. RAST, Assistant
Cashier; H. C. CORE, Assistant Cashier; H. I. ZIEMER, Assistant Cashier; W. C. LANGDON, Assistant Cashier; A. R.
LARSON, Assistant Cashier; ANDREAS UELAND, Legal Counsel.
HOMER P. CLARK, Deputy Chairman; CURTIS L. MOSHER, Assistant Federal Reserve Agent; J. F. EBERSOLE,
Assistant Federal Reserve Agent; FRED M. BAILEY, Manager Bank Examination Department.
MEMBER OF FEDERAL ADVISORY COUNCIL
Theodore Wold, Minneapolis, Minn.

HELENA BRANCH.

(Transit Number 93-26)

DIRECTORS
THOMAS A. MARLOW, Helena; L. M. FORD, Great Falls; R. O. KAUFMAN, Helena; C. J. KELLY, Butte;
H. W. ROWLEY, Billings; HENRY S1EBEN and R. E. TOWLE, Helena.
OFFICERS
R. E. TOWLE, Managing Director; H. F. BROWN, Cashier; W. A. CUTLER, Assistant Cashier; H. L. ZIMMER­
MAN, Assistant Federal Reserve Agent and Auditor.

LIABILITIES

RESOURCES

Capital paid in......................................................................... $

3,183,000

Surphu.......................................................................................

7,497,000

Government deposits..............................................................

964,000

Due to members—reserve account.......................................

54,698,000

Foreign bank............................................................................

72,000

All other deposits...................................................................

533,000

Total deposits......................................

Gold and gold certificates.............................. $ 6,556,000
Gold settlement board, Federal Reserve
Board........................................................... 22,540,000
Gold with Federal Reserve Agents............... 53,867,000
Gold redemption fund....................................
1,166,000
Reserves other than Gold............................
2,171,000

$56,267,000

Federal Reserve notes in aotual circulation........................
Deferred availability items....................................................

69,294,000
15,215,000

All other liabilities...................................................................

1,144,000

TOTAL LIABILITIES................................................ $152,600,000


https://fraser.stlouisfed.org
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

28

Total reserve............................................
Nonreserve cash..............................................
Bills discounted—secured by Government
obligations....................................................
Bills discounted—all other.............................
Bills bought in open market........................
U. S. bonds.....................................................
U. S. Treasury Notes....................................
Other securities................................................
Foreign Loans on Gold................................
Bank premises.................................................
U. S. certificates of indebtedness..................
Uncollected items............................................
All other resouroes...........................................

$ 86,300,000
659,000

TOTAL RESOURCES.........................

$152,600,000

2,610,000
3,689,000
20,491,000
7,665,000
5,662,000
45,000
290,000
3,070,000
1,962,000
17,487,000
2,670,000

FEDERAL RESERVE BANK INFORMATION
DISTRICT No. 10—Bank Located at Kansas City, Mo. (Transit Number 18-4)
(10th & Grand Aye.)
TERRITORY IN DISTRICT Kansas, Nebraska, Colorado, Wyoming, all Missouri west of the eastern boundaries
of the following counties: Worth, Gentry, DeKalb, Clinton, Clay, Jackson, Cass, Bates, Vernon, Barton, Jasper, Newton,
and McDonald; all Oklahoma with exception of the following counties: Atoka, Byron, Choctaw, Coal, Johnston, Marshall,
McCurtain, and Pushmataha; all New Mexico north of a line forming the southern boundary of the following counties:
McKinley, Sandoval, Santa Fe, San Miguel, and Union.
Membership: National Banks 1006; State Banks 32.
DIRECTORS
CLASS A:—E. E. MULLANEY (1926), Hill City, Kan.; FRANK W. SPONABLE (1928), Paola, Kan.; C. C. PARKS
(1927), Denver, Colo.
CLASS B:—HARRY W. GIBSON (1926), Muskogee, Okla.; THOS. C. BYRNE (1927), Omaha, Neb.; J. M.
BERNARDIN (1928), Kansas City, Mo.
CLASS C:—M. L. McCLURE (1926), Kansas City, Chairman of Board; HEBER HORD (1927), Central City, Neb.;
Deputy Chairman of Board; W. S. BULKLEY (1928), Oklahoma City.
P. W. GOEBEL Kansas City, Mo., Member Federal Advisory Council.
OFFICERS
M. L. McCLURE, Chairman and Federal Reserve Agent; A. M. McADAMS, Secretary and Assistant Federal Reserve
Agent; W. J. BAILEY, Governor; C. A. WORTHINGTON, Deputy Governor; J. W. HELM, Cashier.
ASSISTANT CASHIERS:—JOHN PHILLIPS, Jr., E. P. TYNER, G. E. BARLEY, M. W. E. PARK, G. H.
PIPKIN.
S. A. WARDELL, Auditor; WALTER ROBINSON, Manager, Department of Examination.

DENVER BRANCH

(Transit Number 23-19)

(17th & Arapahoe)
J. E. OLSON, Managing Director; A. J. CONWAY, Cashier; JOHN A. CRONAN, Assistant Cashier.
DIRECTORS
HAROLD KOUNTZE, Denver; A. C. FOSTER, Denver; J. E. OLSON, Denver; MURDO MACKENZIE, Denver;
R. H. DAVIS, Denver; H. W. FARR, Greeley, Colo.; WM. L. PETRIKIN, Denver.

OMAHA BRANCH

(Transit Number 27-12)

(1701-5 Dodge St.)
L. H. EARHART, Managing Director; G. A. GREGORY, Cashier; W. D. LOWER and WM. PHILLIPS
Assistant Cashiers.
•
DIRECTORS
WM. DEIS1NG, Omaha; A. H. MARBLE, Cheyenne, Wyo.; L. H. EARHART, Omaha; R. O. MARNELL,
Nebraska City; J. E. MILLER, Lincoln; T. L. DAVIS, Omaha; A. J. WEAVER, Falls City, Nebraska.

OKLAHOMA CITY BRANCH

(Transit Number 39-24)

(226 West Third St.)
C. E. DANIEL, Managing Director; R. O. WUNDERLICH, Cashier; R. L. MATHES, Assistant Cashier.
DIRECTORS
WALTER FERGUSON, Oklahoma City; WM. MEE, Oklahoma City; W. F. NICHOLS, Tulsa, Okla.; C. E.
DANIEL, Oklahoma City; N. A. HOLMAN, Guthrie; FRANK BUTTRAM, Oklahoma City/
’
LIABILITIES

RESOURCES

Capital paid in......................................................................... $

4,237,000

Surplus fund.............................................................................

8,977,000

Government deposits...............................................................

149,000

Due to members—reserve account.......................................

89,679,000

Foreign banks...........................................................................

87,000

All other deposits.....................................................................

900,000

Total deposits......................................... $90,815,000
Federal Reserve notes in actual circulation........................

69,764,000

Deferred availability items.....................................................

45,379,000

All other liabilities...................................................................

830,000

TOTAL LIABILITIES................................................ $220,002,000


https://fraser.stlouisfed.org
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

Gold and gold certificates.............................$ 4,238,000
Gold settlement fund, F. R. B’d................... 30,140,000
Gold with Federal Reserve Agents.............. 50,499,000
Gold redemption fund.....................................
2,226.000
Reserves other than Gold...............................
3,721,000
Total reserve............................................
Nonreserve cash.............................................
Bills discounted—secured by Government
obligations.................................................
Bills discounted—all other.............................
Bills bought in ODen market..........................
U.S. Bonds.......................................................
U. S. Treasury Notes.....................................
U. S. certificates of indebtedness...................
Other securities...............................................
Foreign Loans on Gold...................................
Bank premises..................................................
Uncollected items...........................................
All other resources...........................................
TOTAL RESOURCES.........................

$

90,824,000
1,897,000
8,853,000
11,690,000
15,635,000
8,387,000
15,211,000
9,372,000
100,000
352,000
4,884,000
52,256,000
541,000
$220,002,000

FEDERAL RESERVE BANK INFORMATION
DISTRICT No. 11—Bank Located at Dallas.

(Transit Number 32-3)

TERRITORY IN DISTRICT—Texas, all New Mexico south of the northern boundaries of the following counties:
Valencia, Bernolillo, Torrance, Guadalupe, and Quay, all Louisiana north of the southern boundaries of the following
counties: Sabine, Natchitoches, Grant, LaSalle, Catahoula, and Concordia; the following counties in Oklahoma: Atoka,
Marshall, Bryan, Choctaw, Coal, Pushmataha, McCurtain, and Johnston, and the following counties in Arizona: Pima,
Graham, Greenlee, Cochise, and Santa Cruz.
Membership: National Banks 732; State Banks 127.
DIRECTORS
CLASS A:—J. H. FROST (1927), San Antonio, Tex.; HOWELL E. SMITH (1926), McKinney, Tex.; W. H.
PATRICK (1928), Clarendon, Tex.
CLASS B:—J. H. NAIL (1928), Ft. Worth, Texas; FRANK KELL (1927), Wichita Falls, Texas; J. J. CULBERT­
SON (1926), Paris, Texas.
CLASS C:—C. C. WALSH (1928), Chairman of Board and Federal Reserve Agent; CLARENCE E. LINZ (1926),
Deputy Chairman of Board; Dallas; S. B. PERKINS (1927), Dallas.
OFFICERS
C. C. WALSH, Chairman of Board and Federal Reserve Agent; CHAS. C. HALL, Assistant Federal Reserve Agent and
Secretary; W. J. EVANS, Assistant Federal Reserve Agent; LYNN P. TALLEY, Governor; R. R. GILBERT, Deputy Gov­
ernor; R. B. COLEMAN, Deputy Governor; FRED HARRIS, Cashier; W. O. FORD, Assistant Cashier; W. D.
GENTRY, Assistant Cashier; J. L. HERMANN, Assistant Cashier; E. B. AUSTIN, Assistant Cashier; R. L.
FOULKS, General Auditor; W. P. CLARKE, Assistant Auditor; CHAS. C. HUFF, General Counsel; E. B. STROUD,
Jr., Office Counsel.
B. A. McKINNEY, Member Federal Advisory Council, Dallas, Tex.

EL PASO BRANCH.

(Transit Number 88-1)

M. CRUMP, Managing Director; ALLEN SAYLES, Cashier.
DIRECTORS
M. CRUMP, E. M. HURD, A. P. COLES, C. M. NEWMAN, and GEORGE D. FLORY, El Paso; E. A. CAHOON,
Roswell, N. Mex.; H. L. KOKERNOT, Alpine, Tex.

HOUSTON BRANCH.

(Transit Number 35-4)

DWIGHT P. REORDAN, Managing Director; L. G. PONDROM, Cashier; H. R. De MOSS, Assistant Cashier.
DIRECTORS
DWIGHT P. REORDAN, GUY M. BRYAN, E. F. GOSSETT, R. M. FARRAR and E. A. PEDEN, Houston; J. C
WILSON, Beaumont; FRED W. CATTERALL, Galveston.

RESOURCES

LIABILITIES
$

Capital paid in...............................................................

Gold and gold certificates............................ $ 10,913,000
Gold settlement fund. F. R. B’d................... 13,670,000
Gold with Federal Reserve Agents............... 18,745,000
Gold redemption fund........................................
2,181,000
Reserves other than gold..................................
5,546,000

4,278,000
7,592,000

Surplus fund.................................................................
Government deposits....................................................

163,000

Due to members—reserve account........................... .

61,859,000

Foreign bank................................................................

76,000

AH other deposits.........................................................

144,000

Total deposits....................................... $62,242,000
Federal Reserve notes in actual circulation............

,

47,931,000

Deferred availability items.........................................

.

36.480,000

AD other liabilities.......................................................

TOTAL LIABILITIES


https://fraser.stlouisfed.org
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

1,125,000

$159,648,000

30

Total reserve............................................
Nonreserve cash............................................
Bills discounted—secured by Government
obligations.....................................................
Bills discounted—all others...........................
Bills bought in open market..........................
U. S. Bonds......................................................
U. S. Treasury Notes.....................................
U. S. certificates of indebtedness..................
Foreign Loans on Gold...................................
Bank premises.....................................
Uncollected items...........................................
All other resources...........................................

$ 51,055,000
1,662,000

TOTAL RESOURCES.........................

$159,648,000

1,767,000
7,562,000
33,321,000
7,033,000
14,382,000
4.815,000
308,000
1,834.000
34,703,000
1,206,000

FEDERAL RESERVE BANK INFORMATION
DISTRICT No. 12—Bank Located at San Francisco.

(Transit Number 11-37)

(Sansome and Sacramento Sts.)

TERRITORY IN DISTRICT—California, Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Nevada, Utah, and the following counties
in Arizona: Apache, Coconino, Gila, Maricopa, Mohave, Navajo, Pinal, Yavapai, and Yuma.
Membership: National Banks 587; State Banks 164.
DIRECTORS
CLASS A:—J. S. MacDONNELL (1926), Pasadena, Calif.; HOWARD WHIPPLE (1927), Turlock, Calif., C. K. McINTOSH (1928), San Francisco. Calif.
CLASS B:—A. B. C. DOHRMAN (1926), San Francisco; WM. T. SESNON (1927), Soquel, Calif.; E. H. COX
(1928), Madera.
CLASS C:—JOHN PERRIN (1926): San Francisco, Calif.; Chairman of Board and Federal Reserve Agent; WALTON
N. MOORE (1927), San Francisco, Calif., Deputy Chairman of Board. WILLIAM SPROULE (1928), San Francisco.
Calif.
OFFICERS
JOHN PERRIN, Chairman of the Board and Federal Reserve Agent.
S. G. SARGENT, Assistant Federal Reserve Agent.
ALLAN SPROUL, Assistant Federal Reserve Agent.
JNO. U. CALKINS, Governor.
C. D. PHILLIPS, Assistant Cashier.
WM. A. DAY, Deputy Governor.
C. E. EARHART, Assistant Cashier.
IRA CLERK, Deputy Governor
H. N. MANGELS, Assistant Cashier.
L. C. PONTIOUS, Deputy Governor.
M. McRITCHIE, Assistant Cashier.
W. N. AMBROSE, Cashier.
E. C. MAILLIARD, Assistant Cashier.
W. M. HALE, Assistant Cashier.
F. H. HOLMAN, General Auditor.
A. C. AGNEW, Counsel.
HENRY S. McKEE, Member Federal Advisory Council,
Los Angeles, California.

LOS ANGELES BRANCH, (Transit Number 16-16)
(Washington Bldg., 3rd and Spring Sts.)

R. B. MOTHERWELL, Managing Director; G. H. SCHMIDT, Assistant Manager; A. J. DUMM, Assistant Cashier;
L. C. MEYER, Assistant Cashier.
DIRECTORS
R. B. MOTHERWELL, Los Angeles; HENRY M. ROBINSON, Los Angeles; J. F. SARTORI. Los Angeles; F. J.
BELCHER, JR., San Diego; W. L. VALENTINE, Los Angeles; E. M. LYON, Redlands; GEO. B. HARRISON, Upland.

PORTLAND BRANCH, (Transit Number 24-1)
(Porter Bldg., 6th and Oak Sts.)

R. B. WEST, Managing Director; S. A. MacEACHRON, Assistant Manager; J. P. BLANCHARD, Assistant Cashier
DIRECTORS
R. B. WEST, Portland; J. C. AINSWORTH, Portland; WILLIAM POLLMAN, Baker; JOHN F. DALY, Port­
land; NATHAN STRAUSS, Portland; A. C. DIXON, Eugene: EDWARD C. PEASE, The Dalles.

SALT LAKE CITY BRANCH,

(Transit Number 31-31)

(Deseret National Bank Bldg., Main and 1st South Sts.)

W. L. PARTNER, Managing Director; H. M. CRAFT, Assistant Manager; W. M. SMOOT, Assistant Cashier.
DIRECTORS
W. L. PARTNER, Salt Lake City; L. H. FARNSWORTH, Salt Lake City; CHAS. H. BARTON, Ogden; J. S.
BUSSELL, Pocatello; LAFAYETTE HANCHETT, Salt Lake City; CHAPIN A. DAY, Ogden; F. J. HAGENBRATH,
Spencer.
_______________

SEATTLE BRANCH, (Transit Number 19-1)
(2nd Avenue and Spring St.)

DIRECTORS
C. R. SHAW, Managing Director; B. A. RUSSELL, Assistant Manager.
C. R. SHAW, Seattle; M. F. BACKUS, Seattle; M. A. ARNOLD, Seattle; E. W. PURDY, Bellingham; CHAS. H.
CLARKE, Seattle; CHAS. E. GACHES, Mt. Vernon; HENRY A. RHODES, Tacoma.

SPOKANE BRANCH, (Transit Number 28-1)
(Post St. and Main Ave.)

D. L. DAVIS, Managing Director; JOS. M. LEISNER, Assistant Manager; EVAN BERG, Assistant Cashier.
DIRECTORS
D. L. DAVIS, Spokane; C. E. McBROOM, Spokane; CHAS. L. MACKENZIE, Colfax; R. L. RUTTER, Spokane;
G. I. TOEVS, Spokane; E. H. VAN OSTRAND, Coeur d’Alene; WILLIAM DULING, Garfield.
LIABILITIES

RESOURCES

Capital paid in..........................................................................$ 8,234,000
Surplus fund.............................................................................
15,071,000
Government deposits...............................................................
926,000
Due to members—reserve account....................................... 168,956,000
Foreign Bank...........................................................................
152,000
All other deposits.....................................................................
5,578,000
Total deposits.................................... $175,612,000
Federal Reserve notes in actual circulation........................ 207,883,000
Deferred availability items..................................................... 49,726,000
All other liabilities...................................................................
1,781,000

TOTAL LIABILITIES


https://fraser.stlouisfed.org
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

Gold and gold certificates.............................. $ 32,845,000
Gold settlement fund, F. R. B’d................... 37,894,000
Gold with Federal Reserve Agents............... 194,442,000
Gold redemption fund.....................................
3,618,000
Reserves other than gold...............................
5,696,000
Total reserve............................................
Non-reserve cash.............................................
Bills discounted—Secured by Government
obligations...................................................
Bills discounted—all other.............................
Bills bought in open market..........................
U. S. bonds.......................................................
U. S. Treasury notes.......................................
Foreign Loans on gold...................................
U. S. certificates ofindebtedness...................
Bank premises..................................................
Uncollected items.............................................
All other resources...........................................

$458,307,000

TOTAL RESOURCES
31

$274,495,000
2,484,000
30,274,000
20.094,000
31,764,000
467,000
23,522,000
616,000
15,051,000
3,338,000
52,568,000
3,634,000
$ 458,307,000

FEDERAL LAND BANK INFORMATION

FEDERAL FARM LOAN BOARD
WASHINGTON, D. C.

E. S. LANDES
A. C. WILLIAMS

ANDREW W. MELLON, Chairman
R. A. COOPER, Farm Loan Commissioner

E. E. JONES
L. J. PETTIJOHN
JOHN H. GUILL

A. D. BRIGHT, Secretary
DISTRICT No. 1—Bank Located at Springfield, Mass.
TERRITORY IN DISTRICT—Maine. New Hampshire. Vermont. Massachusetts. Rhode Island. Connecticut. New York, and New Jersey.
CAPITAL $2 521,975.
DIRECTORS—EDWARD H. THOMSON. President; B. G. McINTYRE. Vice-President;
EDWIN FORBUSH. Secretary; J. J.
MERRIMAN. Treasurer; HERBERT MYRICK. Director; G. F. WARREN, and C. R. TREAT; WM. H. BROWNING. Jr.. Registrar.

DISTRICT No. 2—Bank Located at Baltimore, Md.
TERRITORY IN DISTRICT—Pennsylvania. Delaware, Maryland. Virginia, West Virginia, and the District of Columbia.
CAPITAL, $3,288,410.
DIRECTORS — VULOSKO VAIDEN, Pretident; D. G. HARRY. Vice-President; CALVIN R. TITLOW Secretary; HORACE S. WYNN.
Treasurer; JOHN H. MURRAY. Director; JOHN H. JOHNSON, and I. P. WHITEHEAD; RALPH K. FLETCHER. Registrar.

DISTRICT No. 3—Bank Located at Columbia, S. C.
TERRITORY IN DISTRICT—North Carolina. South Carolina. Georgia, and Florida.
CAPITAL, $3,393,210.
DIRECTORS—HOWARD C. ARNOLD. President; L. I. GUION. Vice-President; W. F. STEVENS, Secretary; D. T. GEROW. Treasurer;
ALAN JOHNSTONE, and C. E. VANCE; R. H. WELCH. Registrar._____________________

DISTRICT No. 4—Bank Located at Louisville, Ky.
TERRITORY IN DISTRICT—Ohio. Indiana. Kentucky, and Tennessee.
CAPITAL, $5,119,355.
ninFCTORS__IAMES B DAVIS President; H. A. SOMERS. Vice-President; L B. CLORE. Secretary; HERMAN F. MONROE. Treasurer ;
D*^ER.TlE^T^RICE,7cirec<or; GEORGE WILBER, and A. P. SANDLES: M. R. TODD. Registrar.

DISTRICT No. 5—Bank Located at New Orleans, La.
TERRITORY IN DISTRICT—Alabama. Mississippi, and Louisiana.
CAPITAL $5,241,735#
ninPrTORS—T 'f DAVIS President; R. T. GOODWYN. Vice-President: C. C. GASPARD. Director; J. V. De GRUY.
J M KOON'ce. Secretary;; F?S. SWALM. and J. S. ALLEN; H. G. ASHLEY. Registrar.

Treasurer;

DISTRICT No. 6—Bank Located at St. Louis, Mo.
TERRITORY IN DISTRICT—Illinois. Missouri and Arkansas.
CAPITAL, $3,658,915.
nmFCTORS—H P BESTOR. President; W. D. GIBBS. Vice-President; O. J. LLOYD. Secretary; M. F. DICKINSON. Treasurer, C. E.
HOPKml biV^orTw W. MARTIN, and L. M. BURGE; C. S. WILLIAMS. Registrar.

DISTRICT No. 7—Bank Located at St. Paul, Minn.
TERRITORY IN DISTRICT—Michigan. Wisconsin. Minnesota, and North Dakota.
CAPITAL, $6,120,065.
mwFPTORS__H K IENNINGS President; BENJ. F. FAAST, Vice-President: A. R. BURR. Secretary; PAUL A. PREUS, Treasurer;
SAMuStORGERSOn!^Director;Tc. ERICKSON, and E. G. VAN LEUVEN; D. J. McKENZIE. Registrar.

DISTRICT No. 8—Bank Located at Omaha, Neb.
TERRITORY IN DISTRICT—Iowa, Nebraska. South Dakota, and Wyoming.
niprrmnq6’4n p HOGAN President■ JOHN CARMODY. Vice-President; WARD K. NEWCOMB. Secretary; E. D. MORCOM. Treasurer;
° A^OPPERUD.
P L LUCHSINGEKTnd J. C. UNDERWOOD; SAMUEL H. BLACKWELL. Registrar.

DISTRICT No. 9—Bank Located at Wichita, Kas.
TERRITORY IN DISTRICT—Oklahoma. Kansas. Colorado, and New Mexico.
CAPITAL, $4,204,345.
DIRECTORS-MILAS LASATER. President;
FLOYD M. WILSON. Vice Presided; L. B. MYERS Vice President; W. E. FISHER.
Secretary; A. N. ROCHESTER. Treasurer; D. C. ROYER. Director, and FAY SPERRY; C. A. RYKEK. Registrar.

DISTRICT No. 10—Bank Located at Houston, Tex.
TERRITORY IN DISTRICT—The State of Texas.
CAPITAL, $5,827,580.
DIRECTORS—M. H. GOSSETT. President; S. A. LINDSAY. Vice-President; JOHN Van de MARK. Secretary; R. D. JOHNSON. Treasurer;
F. E. CHURCHILL. Director; ROWAN MILLS, and J. M. NEELY; JAS. H. BRANARD, Registrar.

DISTRICT No. 11—Bank Located at Berkeley, Cal.
TERRITORY IN DISTRICT—California, Nevada. Utah, and Arizona.
CAPITAL* $2,607,235#
niRECTORS—W' D FI I IS President; JOHN T. WILSON. Vice President; A. M. MORTON. Secretary; SIMS ELY. Treasurer; GEORGE
SAWYER. Director; S. S.‘ SMITH, and R. T. EVANS; F. S, BALDWIN. Registrar.

DISTRICT No. 12—Bank Located at Spokane, Wash.
TERRITORY IN DISTRICT—Washington, Oregon. Montana, and Idaho.
CAPITAL $4 971,207.
DIRECTORS^-GEO. C. JEWETT. President; M. E. LEWIS. Vice-President; A. B. THOMPSON. Treasurer; W. S. McCORMACK. B. D.
THOMPSON, and A. W. CAUTHORN; L. J. BIRDSEYE. Registrar.


https://fraser.stlouisfed.org
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

32

MILITARY POSTS IN THE UNITED STATES
The Map on the two following pages shows the location of all Military Posts in the
United States together with the name of the forts. Below is given the postoffice
address and the banking point for each fort. The nearest banking point is indicated
in italic type marked with *, where it differs from the Post Office address of the fort.

Name

Post Office Address

ADAMS, FT................ Newport, R. I.
ALLEN, FT. ETHAN Ft. Ethan Allen, Vt. * Essex Junction, Vt.
ANDREWS, FT..........Ft. Andrews, Mass. *Boston.
ARMISTEAD, FT.. . Baltimore, Md.
BAKER, FT.................Sausalito, Calif.
BALDWIN, FT.......... Popham Beach, Me. *Bath,
Me.
BANKS, FT..................Winthrop Station, Boston, Mass.
BARRANCAS, FT... .Ft. Barrancas, Fla. *Pensacola.
BARRY, FT................. Ft. Barry, Calif. *San Francisco.
BLISS, FT..................... Ft. Bliss, Tex. *El Paso.
BOLLING FIELD . . . Anacostia, Washington, D. C.
BOYD, CAMP............Ft. Bliss, Tex. *El Paso.
BRADY, FT.................Sault Ste. Marie, Mich.
BRAGG, FT................. Camp Bragg, N. C. * Fayetteville.
BROWN, FT................Brownsville. Tex.
CAMPO..........................Campo, Calif. *National City.
CANBY, FT................. Ilwaco, Wash.
CARLSTROM FIELD Arcadia, Fla.
CARROLL, FT........... Baltimore, Md.
CASEY, FT.................. Ft. Casey, Wash. *Port Townsend.
CASWELL, FT........... Southport, N. C.
CHIGAS CAMP.........Santa Fe St. Bridge, El Paso, Tex
CLARK, FT..................Braekettville, Tex.
COLUMBIA, FT........ Fort Columbia, Wash. *Ilwaco, Wash.
CONSTITUTION, FT.Newcastle, N. H. *Portsmouth.
CRISSY FIELD.........Presidio, San Francisco, Calif.
CROCKETT, FT........Galveston, Tex.
CROOK, FT..................Ft. Crook, Nebr. *Omaha.
CUSTER, CAMP. ...Camp Custer, Mich. *Battle Creek.
DADE, FT.....................Ft. Dade, Fla. *Tampa.
DELAWARE, FT. . .Delaware City, Del.
DES MOINES, FT... Ft. Des Moines, la. *Des Moines
DEVENS, CAMP. .. .Camp Devens, Mass. *Ayer
DIX, CAMP................ Camp Dix, N. J. *Wrightstoum
DOUGLAS, CAMP . . Douglas, Ariz.
DOUGLAS, FT...........Ft. Douglas, Utah, *Salt Lake City.
DUPONT, FT............. Delaware City, Del.
DUVALL, FT..............Boston Harbor, Boston, Mass.
EAGLE PASS, CAMP Eagle Pass. Tex.
EUSTIS, FT.................Camp Eustis, Va., *Newport News
FISHERMAN’S ISLAND. .Kiptopeka, Va., Cape Charles
FLAGLER, FT............Ft. Flagler, Wash., *Port Townsend
FOSTER, FT............... Kittery, Me.
FREMONT, FT..........Ft. Fremont, S. C., *Beaufort
FUNSTON. FT........... San Francisco, Calif.
FURLONG, CAMP. .Columbus, N. M., *Deming
GAINES, FT................Dauphin Island, Ala., *Mobile
GETTY, FT................. Ft. Greble, R. I., *Newport
GOVERNORS ISLAND. .New York Harbor, N. Y. City
GRANT, CAMP.........Camp Grant, Ill., *Rockford
GRAY’S HARBOR... Coast Defense of Columbia River, Wash.
GREBLE, FT...............Ft. Greble, R. I., *Newport
HAMILTON, FT........Ft. Hamilton, N. Y., *New York City
HANCOCK, FT.......... Ft. Hancock, N. J„ *Sea Bright
HARRISON, FT.
BENJAMIN............. Ft. Benjamin Harrison, Ind., *Indianapolis
HAYES, FT..................Ft. Hayes, Ohio, *Columbus
HEARN, CAMP
Laurence J..................Imperial Beach, Calif., *San Diego
HEATH, FT................. Winthrop, Boston, Mass.
HOUSTON, FT.
SAM............................ Ft. Sam Houston, Tex., *San Antonio
HOWARD, FT............ Ft. Howard, Md., *Baltimore
HOYLE, FT..................Edgewood, Md., *Oakland
HUACHUCA, FT. ...Ft. Huachuca, Ariz., *Tombstnne
HUNT, FT....................Ft. Hunt, Va., *Washington, D. C.
JACKSON, FT.............New Orleans, La.
JAY, FT......................... New York City, N. Y.
JEFFERSON
BARRACKS............. Jefferson Barrack, Mo., *St. Louis
JESUP, CAMP............Camp Jesup, Ga., * Atlanta
KEARNY, FT.
PHILIP...................... Ft. Greble, Va., *Newport
KEARNY, CAMP .. .Camp Kearny, Calif., *San Diego
KEY WEST
BARRACKS............Key West, Fla.
KNOX CAMP............Stithton, Ky.
LAWTON, FT.............Seattle, Wash.
LEE HALL, VA..........Leehall, Va., *Newport
LEVETT, FT.............. Portland, Me.
LEWIS, CAMP.......... Camp Lewis, Wash.
LOGAN, FT.................. Ft. Logan, Colo., *Littleton
LYON, FT....................Portland, Me.
MacARTHUR, FT.. .San Pedro, Calif.
McCLARY, FT...........Portsmouth, N. H.
McCLELLAN, CAMPCamp McClellan, N. H., * Anniston, Ala.
McDOWELL, FT...... Angel Island, Calif., *San Francisco
McINTOSH, FT.........Laredo, Tex.
McKINLEY, FT........Portland, Me.
McPHERSON, FT. . Ft. McPherson, Ga., * Atlanta
McREE, FT.................Ft. Barrancas, Fla., *Pensacnla


https://fraser.stlouisfed.org
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

Name

Post Office Address

MADISON
BARRACKS............ Sackets Harbor, N. Y., * Watertown
MANSFIELD, FT. . . Watch Hill, R. I„ * Westerly
MARCHFIELD,........ Riverside, Calif.
MARFA, CAMP........ Marfa, Tex.
MARSHALL FIELD .Junction City, Kansas
MATHER FIELD ...Mills, Calif., *Sacramento
MAXWELL FIELD. .Montgomery, Ala.
MEADE, CAMP........ Camp Meade, Md., *Baltimore
MEADE, FORT.........Fort Meade, S. D., *Sturgis
MICHIE, CAMP
ROBERT E. L....... Del Rio, Tex.
MICHIE, FT.............. New London, Conn.
MILEY, FT.................San Francisco, Calif.
MILLER FIELD. . ..Rosebank, Staten Island, *New York, N. Y.
MISSOULA, FT.........Missoula, Mont.
MITCHEL FIELD . .Garden City, N. Y., *New York City
MONROE, FT............Ft. Monroe, Va., *Phoebus
MORGAN, FT............Ft. Morgan, Ala., *Mobile
MOTT, FT...................Salem, N. J.
MOULTRIE, FT....... Moultrieville, S. C., *Charleston
MYER, FT....................Ft. Myer, Va., *Washington, D. C.
NIAGARA, FT............ Youngstown, N. Y., *Niagara Falls
NOGALES..................... Nogales, Ariz.
OGLETHORPE, FT. .Fort Oglethorpe, Ga., *Chattanooga, Tenn.
OMAHA, FT.................Omaha, Nebr.
ONTARIO, FT...........Oswego, N. Y.
PARK FIELD............. Millington, Tenn.
PICKENS, FT............. Ft. Barrancas, Fla., *Pensacola
PIKE CAMP................Little Rock, Ark.
PIO PICO, FT.............San Diego, Calif.
PLATTSBURG
BARRACKS............. Plattsburg, N. Y.
POPHAM, FT.............. Bath, Me.
PORTER, FT............... Buffalo, N. Y.
PREBLE, FT................Portland, Me.
PRESIDIO OF
MONTEREY...........Presidio of Monterey, Calif., *Monterey
PRESIDIO OF
SAN FRANCISCO. Presidio Station, San Francisco, Calif., *San
REVERE, FT.............. Hull, Mass., *Hingham
RINGGOLD, FT......... ltiogrande, Tex.
RODMAN, FT............ New Bedford, Mass.
ROSECRANS, FT... . Point Loma, Calif., *San Diego
ROSS FIELD................Arcadia, Calif.
RUCKMAN, FT......... Boston Harbor, Boston, Mass., *Boston
RUSSELL, FT. D. A.Ft. Russell, Wyo., *Cheyenne
ST. PHILIP, FT.........Ft. St. Philip, La., *New Orleans
SAMFORDYCE CAMP Samfordyce, Tex., *Riogrande
SAN JACINTO, FT. .Galveston, Tex.
SAULSBURY, FT.. . . Milford, Del.
SCHUYLER, FT........ Westchester, N. Y., *New York City
SCOTT, WINFIELD, FT. Ft. Winfield Scott, Calif., *San Francisco
SCREVEN, FT............Ft. Screven, Ga., *Savannah
SELFRIDGE, FIELDMount Clemens, Mich.
SHANNON CAMP . .Hachita, N. M., *Deming
SHERIDAN, FT......... Ft. Sheridan, III., *Highlana Park
SLOCUM, FT...............Ft. Slocum, N. Y„ *New York City
SMALLWOOD, FT... Baltimore, Md.
SNELLING, FT.........Ft. Snelling, Minn., *St. Paul
STANDISH, FT.........Boston, Mass.
STANLEY, CAMP.. .Camp Stanley, Tex., *San Antonio
STARK, FT................. Portsmouth, N. H.
STEVENS, FT............Ft. Stephens, Ore., *Astoria
STORY, FT..................Cape Henry, Va., *Norfolk
STRONG, FT.............. Boston, Mass.
SUMTER, FT............. Moultrieviile, S. C., Charleston
TAYLOR, FT.............. Key West, Fla.
TERRY, FT.................Ft. Terry, N. Y., *New London, Conn.
THOMAS, FT............. Ft. Thomas, Newport, Ky., *Newport
TILDEN, FT............... Ft. Tilden, Rockaway Park, L. I., N. Y., New
York City
TOTTEN, FT...............Ft. Totten. N. Y„ *New York City
TOWNSEND, FT.......... Port Townsend, Wash.
TRAVIS, FT................ Galveston, Tex.
VANCOUVER BARRACKS. .Vancouver, Wash.
WADSWORTH. FT. Rosebank, Staten Island, N. Y., *New York City
WARD, FT...................Ft. Ward, Wash., *Seattle
WARREN, FT............ Boston, Mass.
WASHINGTON, FT. .Ft. Washington, Md., ^Washington, S. C.
WAYNE, FT................Detroit, Mich. '
WETHERILL, FT... Jamestown, R. I., *Newport
WHITMAN, FT......... La Conner, Wash.
WILLIAMS, FT......... Cape Cottage, Me., *Portland
WILLAPA BAY.........Raymond, Wash.
WOOD, FT................... New York City
WOOL, FT....................Ft. Monroe, Va., *Phoebus
WORDEN, FT............ Port Townsend, Wash.
WRIGHT, FT. GEORGE. .Spokane, Wash.
WRIGHT, FT. H. G.. .Fisher’s Island, N. Y., *New London, Conn.


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Joint Stock Land Banks.
No. Chartered
Title
Location States in which operating
58. 8- 19-22. The First Joint Stock Land Bank of Montgomery..................... Montgomery, Ala.
Ala. & Ga.
50. 5-29-22. The Pacific Coast Joint Stock Land Bank of Los Angeles......... Los Angeles, Cal.
Cal. & Ariz.
26. 9- 19-19. The California Joint Stock Land Bank of San Francisco........... San Francisco, Cal. Ore. & Cal.
49. 5-29-22. The Pacific Coast Joint Stock Land Bank of San Francisco........ San Francisco, Cal. Cal. & Nev.
60. 9-23-22. The Atlanta Joint Stock Land Bank of Atlanta........................... Atlanta, Ga.
Ga. & Ala.
*29. 11- 11-19. The First Illinois & Missouri Joint Stock Land Bank of
Champaign................................................................................ Champaign, Ill.
Mo. & IU.
4.
7-25-17. The Chicago Joint Stock Land Bank of Chicago........................ Chicago, Ill.
Iowa & Ill.
33.
2- 24-22. The First-Trust Joint Stock Land Bank of Chicago................... Chicago, Ill.
Iowa & Ill.
55. 7-24-22. The Illinois Midwest Joint Stock Land Bank of Edwardsville. . .Edwardsville, Ill.
Ill. & Mo.
44. 5- 4-22. The Central Illinois Joint Stock Land Bank of Greenville..........Greenville, Ill.
Ind. & Ill.
12.
1-24-19. The Illinois Joint Stock Land Bank of Monticello...................... Monticello, Ill.
Iowa & Ill.
31. 12- 4-19. The State Savings Joint Stock Land Bank of Quincy.................. Quincy, Ill.
Mo. & Ill.
*80. 9-11-23. The Bowen Joint Stock Land Bank of Pittsburgh......................Delphi, Ind.
Ind. & Ill.
10. 12-20-18. The First Joint Stock Land Bank of Ft. Wayne.......................... Ft. Wayne, Ind.
Ohio & Ind.
3. 6- 28-17. The Fletcher Joint Stock Land Bank of Indianapolis.............. Indianapolis, Ind.
IU. & Ind.
27. 10- 1-19.
The Lafayette Joint Stock Land Bank of Lafayette.................Lafayette, Ind.
Ill. & Ind.
72.
1-11-23. The Burlington Joint Stock Land Bank of Burlington................Burlington, la.
Ia. & Ill.
*19.
5-15-19. The Central Iowa Joint Stock Land Bank of Des Moines.......... Des Moines, la.
Minn. & Ia.
15. 4-22-19. The Des Moines Joint Stock Land Bank of Des Moines............ Des Moines, la.
Minn. & Iowa
1.
4-24-17. The Iowa Joint Stock Land Bank of Sioux City..........................Sioux City, la.
S. D. & Ia.
*54.
7- 13-22. The First Kansas-Oklahoma Joint Stock Land Bank of
Kansas City................................................................................. Kansas City, Kans. Kans. & Okla.
*28. 11- 10-19. The Kansas-Missouri Joint Stock Land Bank of Topeka....... Topeka, Kans.
Mo. & Kans.
(Not Operating)
*24. 8- 19-19. The Guarantee Joint Stock Land Bank of Wichita..................... Wichita, Kans.
Okla. & Kans.
*61. 9- 29-22. The Wichita Joint Stock Land Bank of Wichita..........................Wichita, Kans.
Kans. & Okla.
35. 4- 1-22.
The Kentucky Joint Stock Land Bank of Lexington................. Lexington, Ky.
Ohio & Ky.
43.
5- 3-22.
The Louisville Joint Stock Land Bank of Louisville.................. Louisville, Ky.
Ind. & Ky.
62. 10- 3-22. The Union Joint Stock Land Bank of Louisville.......................... Louisville, Ky.
Ky. & Tenn.
*30. 11- 24-19. The First Joint Stock Land Bank of Louisiana.......................... Lake Charles, La.
Tex. & La.
36. 4-10-22.
The First Joint Stock Land Bank of New Orleans.....................New Orleans, La.
Miss. & La.
76. 4- 7-23. The Maryland-yirginia Joint Stock Land Bank of Baltimore. . .Baltimore, Md.
Md. & Va.
79.
5- 9-23. The Bankers Joint Stock Land Bank of Detroit........................Detroit, Mich.
Mich. & Ohio
*11.
1-14-19. The First Joint Stock Land Bank of Minneapolis.......................Minneapolis, Minn. Iowa & Minn.
41. 5- 2-22.
The Minneapolis-Trust Joint Stock Land Bank of Minneapolis . Minneapolis, Minn. N. D. & Minn.
21.
6- 25-19. The Southern Minnesota Joint Stock Land Bank of Redwood.... RedwoodFalls,Minn. S. D. & Minn.
*71. 12- 30-22. The Bankers Joint Stock Land Bank of Boonville...................Boonville, Mo.
Mo. & Ark.
*67. 11- 13-22. The Southeast Missouri Joint Stock Land Bank of
Cape Girardeau. ......................................................................Cape Girardeau, Mo. Mo. & Ark.
5.
1- 9-18. The Kansas City Joint Stock Land Bank of Kansas City.......... Kansas City, Mo.
Mo. & Kans.
*65. 10-23-22. The Missouri Joint Stock Land Bank of Kansas City............... Kansas City, Mo.
Mo. & Okla.
77.
4- 9-23. The Equitable Joint Stock Land Bank of Macon......................Macon, Mo.
Mo. & Iowa
*37. 4- 14-22. The Liberty:Central Joint Stock Land Bank of St. Louis..........St. Louis, Mo.
Ill. & Mo.
34.
3- 27-22. The St. Louis Joint Stock Land Bank of St. Louis..................... St. Louis, Mo.
Ark. & Mo.
14. 4- 17-19. The Fremont Joint Stock Land Bank of Fremont...................... Lincoln, Nebr.
Iowa & Nebr.
8.
7- 12-18. The Lincoln Joint Stock Land Bank of Lincoln..........................Lincoln, Nebr.
Iowa & Nebr.
*17.
5- 8-19. The Peters Joint Stock Land Bank of Omaha............................ Omaha, Nebr.
Iowa & Nebr.
42.
5- 2-22. The New York & New Jersey Joint Stock Land Bank of Newark . Newark, N. J.
N. Y. & N. J.
40.
5- 2-22. The N. Y. Joint Stock Land Bank of New York.........................New York City
N. Y. & Pa.
20.
6- 11-19. The Virginia-Carolina Joint Stock Land Bank of Elizabeth
City, N. C................................................................................. Elizabeth City, N. C . N. C. & Va.
52. 7- 5-22. The North Carolina Joint Stock Land Bank of Durham........... Durham, N. C.
N. C. & Va.
57. 8- 16-22. The Greensboro Joint Stock Land Bank of Greensboro............. Greensboro, N. C.
N. C. & Tenn.
51. 6- 6-22. The Atlantic Joint Stock Land Bank of Raleigh.........................Raleigh, N. C.
N. C. & S. C.
*46. 5-19-22. The North State Joint Stock Land Bank of Raleigh..................Raleigh, N. C.
N. C. & Va.
73.
1- 12-23. The Ohio Joint Stock Land Bank of Cincinnati......................... Cincinnati, Ohio
Ohio & Ind.
*32. 2- 23-22. The Columbus Joint Stock Land Bank of Columbus................. Columbus, Ohio
Mich. & Ohio
70. 12- 14-22. The Ohio-Pennsylvania Joint Stock Land Bank of Cleveland . .Cleveland, Ohio
Ohio & Pa.
*59.
9- 6-22. The First Joint Stock Land Bank of Dayton.............................. Dayton, Ohio
Ohio & Ind.
63. 10- 13-22. The Northwest Joint Stock Land Bank of Portland..................Portland, Ore.
Ore. & Wash.
45.
5-12-22. The Oregon-Washington Joint Stock Land Bank of Portland .. .Portland, Ore.
Wash. & Ore.
47. 5- 29-22. The Pacific Coast Joint Stock Land Bank of Portland..............Portland, Ore.
Wash. & Ore.
*74.
1-17-23. The Pennsylvania-Maryland Joint Stock Land Bank of
Harrisburg.................................................................................. Harrisburg. Pa.
Pa. & Md.
68. 11- 14-22. The Pennsylvania Joint Stock Land Bank of Philadelphia........Philadelphia, Pa.
Pa. & Md.
39. 4-24-22. The First Carolinas Joint Stock Land Bank of Columbia..........Columbia, S. C.
N. C. & S. C.
7. 6- 22-18. The Tennessee Joint Stock Land Bank of Memphis...................Memphis, Tenn.
Ark. & Tenn.
6.
6- 22-18. The Mississippi Joint Stock Land Bank of Memphis....... ...........Memphis, Tenn.
Miss. & Tenn.
*64. 10-20-22. The Fourth & First Joint Stock Land Bank of Nashville.......... Nashville, Tenn.
Tenn. & Ky.
22.
7- 3-19. The Dallas Joint Stock Land Bank of Dallas......................... .Dallas, Texas
Okla. & Texas
53. 7- 5-22. The First-Trust Joint Stock Land Bank of Dallas....................... Dallas, Texas
Tex. & Okla.
16. 4- 23-19. The First Texas Joint Stock Land Bank of Houston....................Houston, Texas
Okla. & Texas
25. 9- 15-19. The San Antonio Joint Stock Land Bank of San Antonio.........San Antonio, Texas Okla. & Texas
*75. 3- 26-23. The Texas-Oklahoma Joint Stock Land Bank of San Antonio . .San Antonio, Texas Tex. & Okla.
48. 5- 29-22. The Pacific Coast Joint Stock Land Bank of Salt Lake City...........Salt Lake City
Idaho & Utah
78. 5- 2-23. The Potomac Joint Stock Land Bank of Alexandria, Va............. Washington, D. C. Va. & Md.
*18. 5-12-19. The Colonial Joint Stock Land Bank of Norfolk........................ Norfolk, Ya.
N. C. & Va.
*23. 7- 19-19. The Union Joint Stock Land Bank of Richmond........................Richmond, Va.
N. C. & Va.
56. 8- 15-22. The Shenandoah Valley Joint Stock Land Bank of Staunton.. . .Staunton, Va.
Va. & W. Va.
*66.
10- 30-22. The Dayton Agricultural Joint Stock Land Bank of Charleston. .Charleston, W. Va. W. Va. & Ohio
2.
5- 7-17. The Virginian Joint Stock Land Bank of Charleston................. Charleston, W. Va. W. Va. & Ohio
69. 12- 6-22. The Greenbrier Joint Stock Land Bank of Lewisburg................ Lewisburg, W. Va.
W. Va. & Va.
9. 9- 6-18. The Bankers Joint Stock Land Bank of Milwaukee..................... Milwaukee. Wis.
Minn. & Wis.
38. 4- 18-22. The Denver Joint Stock Land Bank of Denver...................... .Denver, Colo.
Colo. & Wyo.

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CLEARING HOUSES IN THE UNITED STATES
Babson’a Statistical Organization of Wellesley Hills, Mass, says: “One of the best measurements of a locality’s purchas­
ing power is in the amount of the deposits in its banks. Moreover, one of the best measurements of a locality’s prosperity
is the relative rate at which the amount on deposit in its banks is increasing.”
_
This compilation of deposits in the cities having Clearing Houses gives total deposits of all banks and will be a valuable
reference for comparisons.
CTTY

Jan.1925

July, 1925.

DEPOSITS

DEPOSITS

Jan., 1926.
DEPOSITS

CITY

Jan., 1925

July, 1925.

DEPOSITS.

DEPOSITS

Jan., 1926.
DEPOSITS

9,195,580$ 9,702,040 $ 9,322,200
4,891,030
5,013,460
5,098^20
1,313,940
1,307,540
1,349,160
25,984,170 24,279,720 27,000,980
4,830,910
4,308,490
4,191,850
9,771,710 10,845,430! 11,409,940
2,489,410
2,596,730
2,419,480
47,356,540 48,897,910! 52.866.880
3.997.950
3,187,950
4,753,730
7.836.340
7,206,590
6,075,620
45,478,340 45,109,620 48,562,630
72,622,610 77,598,060) 75,608,610
16,897,840! 15,438,770! 16,435,440
5.398.950 j 5,232,430
5,199,720
36,092,370! 37,243,350 38,014,710
10,554,500 10,255,340
56,047,940 59,901,540 60,823,910
78,508,870 68,150,520 70.918.710
14,248,580 12,559,240 10,615,100
23,767,270 23,895,840 24.285.710
4,036,460
4,448,480
3,875,590,
2.909.340
2,097,780
2,523,590
6,294,380
3,239,970
2,495,270
32,038,530 26,907,450 27,445,310
15,999,630, 16,306,090 17,926,800
7,833,770
8,168,740
7,354,520!
2,913,980
2,835,070
2,708,930!
8,667,040
8,270,050
9,340,500
8,537,640
8,615,440
8,436,390
3,639,500
3,314,090
'3,484,420
75,631,770 76,794,460 85,520,870
10,234,460 12,004,300 13,657,070
13,179,3601 13,459,870 12.884.880
20,542,600 20,931,010 23.684.850
16,229,010! 18,708,650 20,041,960
4,123,730
3,974,280
3,949,670
16,979,800 17,359,510 12,797,490
4,828,420' 4,785,300
3,813,360
17,871,110 18,691,900 18,745,690
13,100,110! 13,509,670 13.526.850
12,792,440 12,794,410 12,826,150
5,867,470
5,514,020
5,599,610,
38,795,290 41,859,000 39,186,700
190,526,080 195,071,360! 217,825,640
6,238,340! 6,038,580
5,633,030!
26,597,270' 27,932,730 29,271,100
4,932,070
4,992,210
4,796,810
13,937,710 11,489,060 13,972,010
4,683,560
4,699,700
4,497,170
3,468,390
2,773,030
3,094,250
Northern No w Jersey Cle aring House

10,108,500 $
9,906,740 Dunkirk, N. Y..............
Aberdeen, S. D..............$
9,876,680
6,629,790
7,418,710 East Chicago, Ind.........
Adrian, Mich.................
6,513,950
87,774,750
86,523,500 Elberton, Ga.................
Akron, Ohio...................
79,129,200
3,965,050
4,399,490 .El Paso, Tex................
Albany, Ga.....................
3,972,290
249,165,300
246,374,810 Emporia, Kan................
•Albany, N. Y............... 236,903,070
39,204,870 Enid, Okla.....................
36,324,210
Allentown, Pa................
35,088,440
15,880,970
16,374,840 Ennis, Tex......................
Altoona, Pa....................
14,959,510
10,736,990
10,667,790 Erie, Pa...........................
Amarillo, Tex.................
11,102,890
3,645,140 Estherville, Iowa............
.......................I
Ames, Iowa. .
15,520,200 Eugene, Ore...................
14,828,960!
Ann Arbor, Mich..........
14,831,950
6,581,790 Evansville, Ind..............
6,789,160!
Annistown, Ala........
9,559,010! Fall River, Mass...........
10,042,130)
9,516,850
Appleton, Wis..........
16,499,330)Fargo, N. D...................
14,458,650
11,757,060
Asheville, N. C........
6,533,690 Faribault, Minn............
6,727,730
7,181,080
Atchison, Kan.........
119,065,600 Flint, Mich.....................
110,673,990
107,557,510
•Atlanta, Ga............
13,999,940 Fort Dodge, la..............
13,996,010
13,206,510
Augusta, Ga.............
17,008,750iFort Wayne, Ind..........
15,925,410
15,809,560
Aurora, Ill................
21,937,090 »Fort Worth, Tex.........
24,661,400
26,034,290
Austin, Tex........
13,708,4101 Franklin, Pa..................
12.930.450
12,250,460
Bakersfield, Calif...
532,509,780 Frederick, Md...............
505,065,010
494,529,860
•Baltimore, Md....
37.745.470 Fremont, Neb................
37,252,990
36,612,790
Bangor, Me..............
8,304,910 Fresno, Calif..................
7,740,120
7,288,650
Bartlesville, Okla...
27,608,630 Gainesville, Fla.............
26,502,340
26,003,560
Battle Creek, Mich.
28,450,030 .Galveston, Tex............
29,443,790
Bay City, Mich.............
28,700,790
jGary, Ind.......................
■Bayonne, N. J. (See N Jersey Clearin g House Assn.,
] Gastonia, N. C..............
N. Y. City)
17,345,550 Glasgow, Ky..................
17,470,430
15,999,100
Beaumont, Tex...........
10,135,450 Grand Forks, N. D....
10,319,060
9,773,890
Bellingham, Wash. ..,
8,212,840 Grand Island, Neb.......
7,605,680
Benton Harbor, Mich
7,209,740 Grand Junction, Colo..
7,161,560
Berkeley, Calif..............
6,054,080
24,873,410 .Grand Rapids, Mich..
23,145,460
Bethlehem, Pa...............
22,263,470
6,874,920 Great Falls, Mont........
6,666,300
7,073,040
Billings, Mont...............
42,000,140 Green Bay, Wis............
40,980,000
Binghamton, N. Y........
38,325,970
84,897,690 Greensboro, N. C..........
73,674,050
•Birmingham, Ala........
79,618,290
21,355,020 Greensburg, Pa..............
25,644,970
Bismarck, N. D.............
18,251,350
14.854.470 Greenville, Miss............
15,216,080
Bloomington, Ill............
14,314,530
15,061,060 Greenville, S. C.............
13,561,610
“
' ----13,963,600
Boise,
Idaho
‘•Boston, Mass........... 1,541,883,940 1,546,795,815 1,649,084,480 Guthrie, Okla.................
3,421,830 Hagerstown, Md...........
3,602,480
3,529,170
Bowling Green, Ky. . .
1,234,570 Hamilton, Ohio.............
1,017,190
1,575,070
Brookfield, Mo............
3,725,150 Hammond, Ind..............
3,112,470
3,170,320
Brunswick, Ga.............
524,884,480 Hannibal, Mo................
502,524,420
492,708,740
•Buffalo, N. Y.............
17,017,520 Harrisburg, Pa..............
17,299,270
16,467,260
Butler, Pa....................
67,760,420 Hartford, Conn.............
60,753,880
Camden, N. J................
59,249,450
54,758,710 Hastings, Neb................
52,869,630
Canton, Ohio.................
47,883,890
5,590,650 Hazleton, Pa..................
5,538,450
5,442,350
Cape Girardeau, Mo...
3,294,900 Helena, Ark...................
3,498,610
3,495,040
Carthage, Mo................
11,823,160 .Helena, Mont..............
10,559,440
12,438,230
Casper, Wyo..................
43,134,150 Henderson, Ky..............
42,041,600
41,628,240
•Cedar Rapids, Iowa...
9,931,630 Henderson, N. Car........
10,015,740
9,914,440
Champaign, Ill..............
4,499,680 'Hoboken, N. J. (See
4,505,380
4,192,240
Charles City, Iowa........
46,561,680 Ass’n, N. Y. City)
34,468,770
__
35,885,620
Charleston,
S. C
49,436,570 49,788,940 50,701,610
37,978,080 Holyoke, Mass........
36,758,500
Charleston; W. Va........
40,596,290
11,312,210 11,887,990 11,484,880
36,718,330 Homestead, Pa........
33,041,290
35,258,480
Charlotte, N. C.
6,775,450
6,355,600
6,196,430
49,069,910 Hot Sp. N.JPark, Ark..
43,877,900
43,414,880
•Chattanooga, Tenn.
132,991,760 132,480,820 133,292,590
1,390,780
1.390.780 Houston, Tex
1,390,780
Cheraw, S. C.
20,528,480 20,758,310 20,417,230
25,718,070
26.172.810 Huntington, W. Va.. ..
Chester, Pa............ ...
23,907,850
2,331,890
2,613,360
2,773,450)
2.710.780 Huntington Park, Calif.
2,768,250
Chester, S. C.................
2,784,570j
8,336,960
8,634,820
9,167,650
6,867,750
8,247,870 ‘Hutchinson, Kan........
Cheyenne, Wyo.............
7,931,020
‘•Chicago, Ill................ 2.542,409,690 2,572,965,560 2,654,147,770 ‘•Indianapolis, Ind.. .. 159,651,540 152,679,090 157,645,110
17,190,560 17,199,320 19,864,090
2,833,150
3,184,480 Jackson, Mich...............
Chillicothe, Mo..............
3,954,680
71,120,050 98,271,130 138,315,190
282,112,550
295,771,880 •Jacksonville, Fla.........
•Cincinnati, Ohio.......... 274,706,400
9,489,200 10,084,150
9,491,150
841,863,590 Jacksonville, Ill.............
881,855,300
‘•Cleveland, Ohio........
806,762,030
27,913,630 30,690,820 31,234,890
18,347,690 Jamestown, N. Y...........
18,648,740
Colorado Springs, Colo..
18,784,910
3,258,480
3,414,850
3,057,520
24,627,200
20,069,630 Jamestown, N. D..........
Columbia, S. C.............
22,444,690
12,223,320
12,728,990 ■Jersey City, N. J. (See Northern Ne w Jersey Cle aring House
Columbus, Ga................
11,900,310
106.380.170
113,942,740 Ass’n, N. Y. City)
‘•Columbus, Ohio.........i
99,532,560
39,085,330 40,321,620 40,920,080
10,262,180
10,308,850 Johnstown, Pa...........
Connellsville, Pa...........
10,660,720
9,650,770 11,480,360 11,971,860
933,040
1,261,450 Joplin, Mo..................
Cordele, Ga....................
1,049,180
19,797,450 20,050,730 21,092,020
11.516.450
9,695,490 Kalamazoo, Mich....
Corsicana, Tex...............!
10,654,790
30,177,120 28,692,970 28,730,170
142,379,670
147,911,780 ‘•Kansas City, Kan.
•Dallas, Tex................... 136,068,540
318,376,440 299,475,450 320,288,390
9,221,670
9,091,640 ‘•Kansas City, Mo..
Danville, Ill....................
8,670,260
33,620,310 35,518,870 35,464,980
53,007,710
54,061,220 Knoxville, Tenn........
Davenport, Iowa..........
57,200,150
Dayton, Oliio
9,173,580
9,064,620
8,927,100
48,493,920
53,816,970 Kokomo, Ind............
45,488,710
12,537,290 13,423,710 13,432,640
16,317,190
15,377,170 ‘LaCrosse, Wis......
15,974,820!
Decatur, Ill................
38,843,510 41,902,090 41,222,620
181.643.170
173,978,040 Lancaster, Pa............
182,171,840;
‘•Denver, Colo..........
24,737,220' 28,004,180 28,283,580
11,420,010
11.643.810 Lansing, Mich...........
Derby, Conn..............
6,470,210
7,050,610
6,511,630
89,981,360
82,088,190 LaSalle, Ill.................
88,190,970
•Des Moines, Iowa. .
5,440,700
5,539,810
5,604,250
799,139,610
837,387,492 Lawrence, Kan..........
719,818,330
‘•Detroit, Mich........
9,303,960
9,534,460
8,826,470
3,339,020
3,379,300 Leavenworth, Kan...
3,179,200
Dickinson, N. D.......
10,099,170 10,811,110 11,140,160
5,594,700 Lebanon, Pa..............
3,961,820
4,012,770
Dothan, Ala...............
18,924,500 20,726,390 20,569,660
1,256,050
1,663,000 Lexington, Ky...........
1,356,050
Dublin, Ga.................
12,567,850 13,071,300 11,759,480
20,110,480
21,087,160 Lima, Ohio.................
•Dubuque, Iowa...........
20,612,030
2,144,000
4,253,140
Duluth, Minn................ I
56,799,450
2,172,350
55.456,150
54,955,320 Lincoln, Ill.................
• Reserve Oity.

* before name of city in above list denotes Clearing House examination.

Officers, members * and affiliated members + may be found by referring to above cities in the Bank List, following the banks.

• See town in bank list for banks which rxe members of the Northern New Jersey Clearing House Association, located at 32 Liberty St„ New York City, N. Y.
https://fraser.stlouisfed.org
32-B
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

CLEARING HOUSES IN THE UNITED STATES—Continued
Jan., 1925

July, 1925

Jan., 1926

DEPOSITS

DEPOSITS

DEPOSITS

CITY

Jan., 1925

July, 1925

DEPOSITS

DEPOSITS

Jan., 1926.
DEPOSITS

•Lincoln, Neb................
42,831,990 $ 46,259,990
40,464,200 Red Wing, Minn.........
5,186,550 $
5,357,280
5,635,510
•Little Rock, Ark.........
56,997,820
54.944.770
49,786,630 Reno, Nev....................
15,190,100
15,018,1201
16,380,520
Long Beach, Calif.........
27,669,420
23.442.970
55,018,570 .Richmond, Va.............
131.335.970
127.492.810
138,043,030
Lorain, Ohio..................
10,607,140
10,835,340
10.240.770 .Ritzville, Wash..........
716,480
828,120
980,550
••Los Angeles, Calif. ..
849,480,550
891,501,960
947,637,800 Riverside, Calif...........
9,113,820
9,630,180
9,428,270
••Louisville, Ky............
139,861,610
141.864.120
138,444,350 Roanoke, Va..................
24,481,840
25,464,410
26.192.370
81.711.760
Lowell, Mass..................
82.606.749
84,692,980 Rochester, Minn...........
7,141,500
7,593,660
7,701,150
Lynn, Mass....................
64,765,110
66,331,140
69,088,840 Rochester, N. Y............
314,484,800
312,454,010
331,538,990
Macon, Ga.....................
17.684.760
17,956,880
19,099,300 Rockford, Ill..................
26,975,700
29,298,100
29,787,230
Madison, Wis................
26,155,430
28.847.750
26,804,970 Rock Island, Ill.............
16,164,860
16,742,340
17,005,210
Manchester, N. H.........
65,746,410
66.568.790
70,112,820 Rocky Mount, N. C. . .
5,910,830
5,977,320
6,367,040
Manhattan, Kan...........
2,742,370
2,780,430:
2,793,330(Rome, Ga.......................
4,572,350
4,687,870:
5,194,250
Manitowoc, Wis............
8,335,690
8,183,740
8,564,430 Sacramento, Calif.........
62,521,180
61,912,890
68,775,850
Mankato, Minn.............
10,472,310
10,992,960
10,647,440 Saginaw, Mich..............
36,975,190
38,200,740
36,933,620
Mansfield, Ohio.............
11,452,370
11,686,800
11,997,430 «St. Joseph, Mo............
52,604,610
50,411,690
45,194,010
McAlester, Okla............
5,011,970
9,223,460
5,494,690 **St. Louis, Mo............
623,467,340
608,412,800
649,742,870
Medford, Ore.................
4,531,010
4,414,4901
5,053,6401 *»St. Paul, Minn..........
171,976,080
152,572,560
163,886,280
•Memphis, Tenn...........
108,743,660
100,012,190! 110,341,720 Salisbury, N. C.............
1,252,510
1,168,290
1,122,970
10,855,080
Meridian, Miss..............
10,954,780'
11,539,190 ‘.Salt Lake City, Utah.
75,985,760
71,081,520
77.796.690
Miami, Fla.....................
114,552,270
117,354,390 *San Antonio, 'f’ex........
65.467.970
65,733,330
59,117,590
••Milwaukee, Wis........
247,804,510
250,531,780
258,804,970 San Bernardino, Calif..
9,238,180
9,545,240
10,051,210
••Minneapolis, Minn...
320,187,640
310.717.120
321,802,840[San Diego, Calif............
55,299,720
58.864.720
60,521,070
5,794,980
Minot, N. D..................
5,726,730'
5,797,380! «San Francisco, Calif... 1,308,680,820 1,309,331,6101 1,458,666,930
28,844,780
Mobile, Ala....................
29,468,370
33.680.930 San Jose, Calif
17,568,790
18,584,080
19,092,570
19,761,510;
20.280.770
Moline, Ill......................
~
Barbara, Calif.. .
21,093,450 Santa
8,910,750
9,181,830]
8,626,080
Montclair, N. J.............
25,200,610
26,340,220i
29,505,920 Santa Monica, Calif. . .
2,703,140
2,816,930
2,844,930
•Montgomery, Ala.......
16,973.050
17,794,450
19.169.930 Santa Rosa, Calif..........
2,884,260
3,179,010
Muscatine, Iowa...........
12.562.790
13,073,020 •Savannah, Ga..............
12,028,490
74,408,550
79,020,150
86,449,400
Muskegon, Mich...........
15,500,020
16,117,710 Scranton, Pa..................
112,291,690
116,552,850
120,368,220
•Muskogee, Okla..........
13,296,380
11,722,960 ‘•Seattle, Wash............
15,128,640
177,492,940
181,108,710
197,099,510
•Nashville, Tenn...........
75,991,270
77,524,990 Sedalia, Mo....................
72,308,840
5,864,820
6,009,110
5,808,160
Nebraska City, Neb. . .
2,894,460
2.786.780 Sherman, Tex................
2,836,990
6,802,340
6,723,310
6.427.370
New Albany, Ind..........
9,294,970;
9.480.780 •Sioux City, Iowa.........
8,658,620
39,670,910
39,540,900
39,554,790
•Newark, N. J..............
324,007,480
355,162,786 Sioux Falls, S. D..........
323,727,250
10,163,770
9,396,610
9,554,640
New Bedford, Mass....
72,967,940
74,452,950 South Bend, Ind...........
72,451,500
34,397,810
33,494,500
36,470,210
New Brighton, Pa........
3.282.970
3,444,030 South St. Paul, Minn. .
3,434,420
6,701,760
6,407,460
7,088,990
New Castle, Pa.............
19,567,930
19.391.770 Spartanburg. S. C........
19,152,610
9,883,640
10,957,700
11.181.690
•New Haven, Conn....
130,744,940
136.215.360 •Spokane, Wash............
128,180,380
69,096,980
53.973.810
57,168,710
Newnan, Ga...................
1,579,490
1,745,310 Springfield, Ill...............
1,868,880
34,212,920
24,116,250
31,115,410
••New Orleans, La. . ..
234,978,250
264.572.360 Springfield, Mass..........
247,460,280
136,679,860
138,971,100
143,974,700
Newport News, Va. . ..
11,496,510
12,086,080lSpringfield, Mo.............
11,307,780
16,150,750
16,472,750
17,724,150
••New York, N. Y.. .6, 11,321,128,980 11,197,232,180 12,072,190,370 Springfield, Ohio...........
17.183.270
18.246.720
17,631,090
Niagara Falls, N. Y....
35,348,840 Stamford, Conn............
31,223,210
31,166,180
34.240.490
35,262,190
39,197,000
Norfolk, Va....................
58,019,2801Steubenville, Ohio........
56,292,190
54,623,800
20,400,650
20.147.490
20,335,680
Norristown, Pa.............
20,211,270 Stockton, Calif............
18,599,590
19,189,040
21,064,320
21,322,820
22,167,970
Northern New Jersey Clearing Hou se Ass’n, (33 L ibertySt., New Superior, Wis.................
10,452,190
10,864,300
10,790,640
N V
York City, N. Y.)
173,954,060
178,941,170
184,336,970
119,486,870 Tacoma, Wash ” .’ ’..' ‘
•Oakland, Calif.............
111,600,090
109,910,620
22.655.990
23,040,650
22,446,010
Ocala, Fla......................
5,352,410
5,970,510 Tampa, Fla....................
4,092,430
66,983,710
47,482,380
105,417,620
Oelwein, Iowa................
3,094,360
3,074,5101Terre Haute, Ind..........
3,038,820
28,087,070
28,207,850
29,770,020
••Ogden, Utah..............
19,364,430
20,993,220
21,346,203| Texarkana, Ark.-Tex...
16.594.270
15,435,390
19,568,860
Oil City, Pa...................
17,129,960
17,478,900
17,410,690 .Toledo, Ohio................
144,356,970
147,506,580
160,705,920
••Oklahoma City, Okla.
71,967,020
74,632,790 .Topeka, Kan...............
82,312,320
34,515,390
32,788,730
31,869,660
Okmulgee, Okla.............
9,035,180
9,288,170 Trenton, N. J................
9.493.320
81.601.990
83,091,090
89,514,960
•Omaha, Neb................
114,513,850 Tucson, Ariz..................
120,185,470
119,906,180
7,658,560
7,578,120
8,073,200
Orange, N. J..................
21,815,720
21,877,310 ‘.Tulsa, Okla................
20.591.120
71,764,580
77,353,020
83,222,330
Orangeburg, S. C......
5.656.570 Twin Falls. Idaho.........
5,741,060
5.629.320
3,111,420
2,791,360
3,727,060
2,625,360!"Union City, N. J. (See NorthernNew Jersey Clearin g House Ass’n,
Osage, Iowa...................
2,810,740
2,668,480
Oshkosh, Wis.................
16,193,740
15,374,330
16.554.560 N. Y. City, N. Y.
Owensboro, Ky.............
9.758.590
9,445,630
9,623,400 Valdosta, Ga..................
5,940,940
6,474,780
7,012,970
Palestine, Tex................
3,187,820
3,255,390! Vicksburg, Miss............
2,872,770
12,228,340
11,379,930
11,757,020
2,879,810
Paris, Ky........................
3.148.570 »Waco, Tex....................
2,803,150
22,198,640
19,747,070
18,973,240
Parsons, Kan.................
3,322,790
3,372,190 .Washington, D. C. ... 224,227,820
3,439,830
229,616,960
237,600,560
•Pasadena, Calif...........
27,114,500
27.905.560 Washington, Ga............
25,834,570
981,110
1,069,020
946,430
42,876,550
Passaic, N. J..................
38.164.120
44,278,870j Waterbury, Conn..........
59,646,330
60,995,270
63,111,850
Pensacola, Fla...............
8.205.590
7,610,750
10,881,910 Waterloo, Iowa..............
12,721,790
12,958,760
12,752,350
•Peoria, Ill.....................
41,554,380
39,189,260
39,767,440|Watertown, S. D..........
5,174,400
5,252,230
5,194,310
••Philadelphia, Pa. ... 1,657,294,590 1,679,608,530 1,794,515,930iWatsonville, Calif.........
4,349,570
4,272,000
4,602,480
Phillipsburg? N. J.........
6,239,030
6,298,120
6,572,230! "West New York, N. J. (S eeNorthernN
Jersey Cle aring House
Phoenix, Axiz.................
26,818,020
21.993.150
24,963,050 Ass’n, N. Y. City, N. Y.
Pine Bluff, Ark..............
10,573,020
12.214.860
14,202,670 Wheeling, W. Va..........
46,831,050
46,803,410
52,415,370
Pittsburg, Kan..............
48,229,980'
7,475,340l**Wichita, Kan.............
7,006,760
7,281,300
52,598,470
42,025,010
•Pittsburgh, Pa.............
919,966,600
908,092,400
930,146,160 Wichita Falls, Tex
26,026,580
Pocatello, Idaho............
3,588,850
3,743,990
3,992,300 Wilkes-Barre, Pa..........
62,631,830
66,246,630
67,399,340
Pontiac, Mich................
22,607,8701 Williamsport, Pa...........
18.415.150
20,457,330
21,209,850
21,720,040!
23,245,700
Portland, Me.................
93,246,460 Wilmington, Del..........
87.117.840
89,456,360
79,443.070
79,236,150
84,132,130
‘•Portland, Ore.............
145,534,840
145,987,600
147,041,040 Wilmington, N. C........
20,407,290
18,768,150;
22,716,480
Portsmouth, Va. (See N orfolk)
Winchester, Va..............
5,760,860
5,530,230
5,843,980
Pottsville, Pa.................
19.502.840
20,183,040 Winona, Minn...............
15,305,940
15,003,670!
15,375,980
Providence, R. I............
345,958,270
348,423,720
374,500,820j Worcester, Mass............ 184,650,350
191,191,330
196,478,990
•Pueblo, Colo................
23,326,450
23,273,200 Yakima, Wash..............
24,584,670
9,452,150
8,893,470
10,677,860
Quincy, Ill......................
24.623.860
23,632,590
24,101,710 York, Pa.........................
30,019,080
27,810,830
29,681,940
Raleigh, N. C................
17,472,560
18,029,710
18,093,200 Youngstown, Ohio........
57,019,280
60,098,260
61,847,400
55,642,200
Reading, Pa...................
55,021,060
58,677,390 Zanesville, Ohio............
17,459,660
16,866,140
17,845,910

• Reserve City.
* before name of city in above list denotes Clearing House examination.
Officers, members * and affiliated members + may be found by referring to above cities in the Bank List, following the banks.

Digitized for• FRASER
See town in bank list for banks whichare members of the Northern New Jersey Clearing House Association, located at 33 Liberty St.. New York City, N. Y.
https://fraser.stlouisfed.org
32-C
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

CONSOLIDATED CAPITULATION FOR JANUARY 1926 STATEMENTS
IMPORTANTt _ This. tabulation covers only institutions performing the functions of a bank. Some publishers for reasons of their own, include in their tabulation all those concerns whose names they publish
but whose business is confined to the selling of investments. Such information is naturally misleading. We carry the names of thousands of such institutions but they are not included in this tabulation.

STATE

Alabama--.
Alaska----------Arizona---------Arkansas-------California..- Colorado-------Connecticut--Florida-- ----Georgia---------Idaho------------Indiana---------Iowa-------------Kansas---------Kentucky.. ..
Louisiana . ...

32-D

Maryland------Massachusetts.
Michigan-------Minnesota-----Mississippi----Missouri--------Montana-------Nebraska_____
Nevada. ____
NewHampshire
New Jersey----New Mexico.__
New' York____
North C arolina
North Dakota.
Ohio_________
Oklahoma------Oregon—
Pennsylvania..
Rhode Island__
South Carolina
South Dakota.
Tennessee-----Texas________
Utah_________
Vermont.. _ .
Virginia______
Washington__
West Virginia..
Wisconsin..- .
Wyoming __

LIABILITIES

Total
Total
Total State
Nat’l Banks Private
Banks andTrust BanksJ
Cos.

103
4
17
89
274
133
64
19
14
61
87
2
56
500
244
329
258
139
41
58
84
155
131
310
38
133
80
167
10
54
278
31
544
83
161
352
379
100
869
14
74
115
107
658
20
43
191
114
124
159
32

269
13
59
389
652
190
165
40
30
276
543
37
102
1 400
724
1,195
1,007
468
256
133
210
305
613
1,043
326
1,405
145
924
24
68
246
33
586
517
477
681
375
180
724
43
300
384
487
846
93
63
367
256
222
831
62

GrandTotalU.S 8,102 20,784
*Undcr State Supervision.

Total
All
Banks

*5
4
2
7
*1
42
*2
*126
149
*2
1
5
*4
164
*3
*2

*12
100
*76
*41
*1
*4
1
94
10

1

377 $
17
76
482
926
325
236
59
44
338
672
39
160
1.900
L094
1,673
1,267
607
298
191
299
464
908
1,353
364
1,54!
227
1,091
34
122
536
64
1,230
600
638
1,109
754
280
1,634
57
375
503
595
1,598
113
106
568
370
346
990
95

27,038,000 8
840,000
4,999,400
24,313,440
183.965,570
18,236,500
38,311,372
10,277,455
23,083,778
30,629^800
46,848,510
6,660,600
6,922^500
260,142,500
78,956,506
78,760,300
44,689,500
41,260,955
33,160,770
12.835,800
40,088,700
111,982,500
101,592,533
66,135,000
17,203,930
113,654,400
12,060,000
40,421,400
3,846,400
8,082,500
99,474,435
3,378,000
552,550,222
37,928,370
16,790,500
175,062,680
34,582,650
22,306,000
317,229,789
15,490.000
24.147,846
13,310,400
43,566,393
120,959,175
11,647,750
7,701,000
57,693,885
29,882,500
35,156.670
62,688,600
4,665,000

1859 29,745

3,173,212,484

Deposits

Other
iabilities

Total
Liabilities

25,008,520
493,470
3,598,596
15,065,410
142,915,149
16,821,385
96,062,353
17,423,940
20,406,920
25,056,142
37,847,850
5,872,080
3,639,302
254,064,784
59,354,020
49,426,939
30,230,234
40,228,754
25,258,200
29,538,400
73,194,150
288,641,650
106,690,760
48,258,240
12,799,366
83,834,246
6,449,560
21,863,350
2,254,300
22,948,040
148,984,220
1,490,670
1,304,860,029
30,991.000
7,320,850
173,937,680
13,144,620
13,1 16,500
675,001,460
36,559,430
15,604.622
8,318,180
28,201,270
73,037,740
7,549,400
19,199,940
53,076,043
16,653.950
36,776.641
47,757,030
3,294,395

292,953,600
11,321,350
67,269,080
257,867,953
3,217,389,518
324,530,740
1,007,264,130
135.748.420
237,601,560
828,895,205
407.105.420
48,761,260
84,531,870
3,755,751,668
840.470.889
967.705.250
479,720,660
427,540,080
473,191,640
352,786.550
734,913,610
3,543,828,260
1,721,885,702
1,054,279,184
237,815,950
1,403,910,274
147,237,690
506,159.530
44,026,250
239.752.500
1,952,138,026
30,705,734
15,197,878,763
407.216.890
199.588.250
2,432,971,290
453,506,680
281,450,290
4,904,278,089
453,139,320
219,306,834
187,064,590
425,442,744
1,134,458,795
138,417,363
204,222,900
490.400.500
453,870,700
354,393,750
874,884,100
60,707,340

15,467,500 $
92,170
3,014,850
11,321,579
121,851,100
7,525,350
24,896,120
4,079,580
15,208,240
10,901,210
29,578,530
27,689,830
3,640,220
169,275,103
151,795,150
30,237,380
15,469,710
45,710,510
48,916,540
19,603,830
55,185,030
185,834,780
83,363,330
27,470,159
14,047,450
53,509,380
3,390,680
16,563,804
1,964,740
9,369,980
78,056,840
1,240,340
961,553,359
34,816,130
7,302,000
170,693,500
10,208,810
13,454,240
242,887,529
16,174,340
14,486,349
4,253,253
55,873,530
62,211,410
16,482,630
9,024,390
64,312,193
43,954,470
32,534,542
32,968,000
3,645,955

360,467,620 $
12,746,990
78,881,920
308,568,382
3,666,121,337
367,113,975
1,166,533,975
167,529,395
296,300,498
895,482,357
521,380,310
88,983,770
98,733,892
4,439,234,055
1,130,576,565
1,126,129,869
570,1 10,104
554,740,299
580,527,150
414,764,580
903,381,490
4,130,287,190
2,013,532,325
1,196,142,583
281,866,696
1,654.908,300
169,137,930
585,008,084
52,091,690
280.153,020
2,278,653,521
36,814,744
18,016,842,373
510,952,390
231,001,600
2,952,665,150
511,442,760
330,327,630
6,139,396,867
521,363,090
273,545,651
212,946,423
553,083,937
1,390,667,120
174,097,143
240,148,230
665,482,621
544,361.620
458,861,603
1.018,297,730
72,312,690

4,280,121,780

54,708,259,341

,083,107,645

65,244,701,250

Loans and
Discounts

|

214,719,750 $
4,574.460
43,327,460
189,235,420
2,158,933,600
171.179,140
635,875,910
80,165,010
162,812,830
436,588,092
336,028,830
50,257,830
50,584,344
2,557,537,302
663,205,720
763,398,690
330,486,266
366,403,510
363,712,804
188,255,170
453,747,540
2,473,236,620
940,341,200
638,224,621
164,352,100
937,725,468
79,114,130
367,347,910
30,881,610
127,988,230
1,119,065,770
20,375,550
7,771,306,999
354,212,794
128,256,800
1,802,078,160
244,583,751
162,423,050
2,864.187,745
245,205,180
177,035,105
124,953,570
351,635,080
765,811,949
106,138,370
149,682,650
467,703,340
257,854,610
314,635,653
606,499,310
39,163,130
34,053,050,133

Bonds and
Securities

46,168,522 $
4,031,800
12,189,260
27,465,680
750,060,730
86,263,450
394,109,804
64,468,900
61,983,260
154,810,300
42,505,374
17,582,150!
19,795,670i
874,676,7191
197,632,530
127,917,345
■ 78,121,960
87,838,520
59,437,880
180,783,290
285,176,120
1,104,027,370
682,051,01 1
303,771,040
41,009,980
307,535,642
41,689,470
60,364,270
7,530,040
129,534,790
840,585,100
5,877,020
5,915,132,801
35,997,520
39,355,600
572,950,530
95,188,5(50
83,405,670
2,158,098,457
217,501,780
31,918,590
26,557,114
47,434,420
162,620,168
28.076,850
69,453,270
72,807,570
150,307,940
59.626,888
215,853,950
11,539,380
17,090,822,055

Miscellaneous

Cash and

Total
Resources

from Banks

12,527,990 $
508,890
5,913,490
12,283,680
170,362,000
10,483,539
36,040,190
6,257,060
27,583,750
18,472,363
25,725,370
5,506,040
5,031,098
165,834,543
108,482,221
49,879,567
24,908,114
19,599.154
41,505,844
16,556,320
36,664,500
133,812,420
91,272,650
46,577,305
11,197,390
57,340,190
7,727,150
32,640,432
2,625,410
4,503,590
92,800,590
2,032,530
780,300,025
22,984,850
14,397,654
157,718,440
23,201,630
20,393,180
269,380,120
12,074,050
14,672.610
13,319,240
43.154,685
72,820.590
6.788,480
6,561,700
30,291,350
41,373,070
21.890,510
35,232,200
2,983,446
2,872,193,210

86,398,500 $
3,631,830
17,427,819
79,579,370
588,161,690
99,119,010
99,657,740
16,715,050
43,874,100
284,131,932
116,191,490
16,137,700
23,280,610
839,167,952
161,009,940
179,641,310
133,425,102
80,313,939
116,055,001
29,716,480
127,666,140
414,447,690
295,725,499
204,995,663
64,041,710
350,974,750
41,042,530
121,401,820
9,717,990
16,169,910
222,393,050
8,387,370
3,541,431,485
96,046,450
47,228,060
417,616,194
146,279,090
63,787,830
846,172,025
46,677,330
49,478,620
46.794,670
109,404,800
383,281,460
33,293,530
13,870,780
93,798,210
94,495,130
62,213.140
159,959,371
18,514,650
11,160,943,512

359,814,762
12,746,980
78,858,029
308,564,150
3,667,518,020
367,045,139
1,165,683,644
167,606,020
296,253,940
894,002,687
520,451,064
89,483.720
98,691,722
4,437,216,516
1,130,330,411
1,120,836,912
566,941,442
554,155,123
580,711,529
415,311,260
903,254,300
4,125,524,100
2,009,390,360
1,193,568,629
280,601.180
1,653,576,050
169,573,280
581,754,432
50,755,050
278,196,520
2,274,844,510
36,672,470
18.008,171.310
509,241,614
229,238,114
2,950,363,324
509,253,031
330,009,730
6,137,838,347
521,458,340
273,104,925
21 1,624,594
551,628,985
1,384,534,167
174,297,230
239,568,400
664.600,470
544,030,750
458,366,191
1,017,544,831
72,200,606
65,177,008,910

JThis does not include corporations, firms and individuals whose names appear herein but which are doing an investment business only.
JULY,

Alberta........................
British Columbia........
Manitoba....................
Miquelon.....................
New Brunswick..........
Newfoundland............
Nova Scotia................
Ontario........................
Prince Edward Island.
Quebec........................
Saskatchewan.............
Yukon................

Total, Canadian Banks and Bankers.
https://fraser.stlouisfed.org
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

Surplus
and
Profits

Capital

RESOURCES

1

CANADA

925

296
200
266
2
115
29
143
1,386
31
1,157
456
3
4,084

JANUARY,

1926

Alberta................................................................
British Columbia................................................................
Manitoba..............................................
Miquelon...........................................................................
New Brunswick.................................................
Newfoundland..............................................
Nova Scotia............................................
Ontario....................................................
Prince Edward Island....................................
Quebec.....................................................
Saskatchewan.................................................
.............
Y ukon.......................................................
Total, Canadian Banks and Bankers ,

...........

443
4,048