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Cfjasie National Jlanfe OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK CAPITAL $40,000,000 SURPLUS & PROFITS $38,204,473.58 DEPOSITS (dec. 31,1926) $852,456,114.24 SEE PACE ADVERTISEMENT IN NEW YORK LIST Rand M£Nally .BAI(KERS DIRECTORY JANUARY 1927 PUBLISHED IN MARCH A. G. Becker & Co. Bonds ♦ Commercial Paper Chicago New York ST. LOUIS SAN FRANCISCO SEATTLE MILWAUKEE MINNEAPOLIS PORTLAND SPOKANE The F. H. Smith Company Founded 1873 FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS SMITH BUILDING 285 MADISON AVE. AT 40th ST. WASHINGTON, D. C. NEW YORK CITY CHICAGO * PHILADELPHIA « BOSTON ST. LOUIS * PITTSBURGH BUFFALO MINNEAPOLIS • ALBANY NO https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LOSS TO ANY INVESTOR Tn 51 YEARS FORMAN FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS Nationally Known Investments That Will Increase Your Bond Sales ORMAN First Mortga Real Est te Bonds are ideal investments e safety has been proven for Bank distributi any millions of dollars, in thousands of transa hout loss to a customer The Forman record of of Forman Bonds are and the facts attestin known to Investors in a Forman Bonds is of in This public confide secure their position as estimable value to Ban distributors of Safe Invest F Write for detailed infmmation regarding the Forman Bond Distribution Plan for Banks GEORGE M. FORMAN and COMPANY First Mortgage Investments 112 W. Adams St., CHICAGO https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 100 E. 42nd St., NEW YORK OFFICES IN PRINCIPAL CITIES The standard form of check protection HE first chemically-protected paper —safety paper—was invented by George La Monte in 1871. Tested by over 50 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 banks and trust com panies, and is regarded as the standard form ah check protection. Ask your lithographer. T SajJty see the inside"] back covers J National Safety Paper GEORGE LA MONTE & SON 61 Broadway, New York Founded 1H71 s OME of the values behind in vestment bonds are tangible, others are intangible; some values are more certain than others. The soundness of any issue can be de termined only by gathering and sifting all the facts. Bonds good enough to receive the National City recommenda tion must be good enough to with stand rigid testsdeveloped through our wide experience in many fields. The National City Company National City Bank Building, New York Offices in more than 50 leading cities throughout the world BONDS https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis SHORT TERM NOTES ACCEPTANCES FEBRUARY JANUARY s M T w T F s s M i 1 2 3 4 6 5 7 8 37 38 MARCH T w T F s 32 33 34 35 36 1 2 3 4 5 39 41 42 43 40 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 9 10 ii 13 14 15 44 45 12 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 46 47 48 49 50 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 51 52 $4 53 55 56 57 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 58 s T w T F s 60 61 62 63 64 1 2 3 65 66^ 67 68 69 4 5 70 71 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 86 59 M 87 88 89 90 27 28 29 30 31 27 28 31 30 31 93 M 94 T 95 3 4 5 100 101 102 T w F s s M T w T 91 92 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 108 109 2 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 99 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 6 7 8 103 104 105 9 8 106 135 110 in 112 113 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 9 10 11 12 13 14 136 184 M 185 3 4 191 192 T w T 186 187 188 5 6 7 193 194 195 199 200 201 202 F s 182 183 1 2 189 190 142 143 206 207 208 209 144 145 149 150 219 M T 214 1 2 220 221 8 9 7 8 197 226 227 156 203 204 210 211 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 234 241 1 2 3 4 159 160 161 162 8 9 10 11 7 20 21 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 146 147 148 170 171 172 166 167 168 173 174 175 169 176 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 177 178 179 180 181 26 27 28 29 30 SEPTEMBER w T F s 215 216 217 218 3 4 5 222 223 224 s M w 248 5 255 232 239 F s 245 246 249 250 251 2 3 252 253 6 7 9 10 8 256 257 258 259 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 269 270 271 272 273 25 26 27 28 29 30 28 29 30 31 260 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 268 243 T 244 1 247 4 236 237 238 T 6 225 254 242 158 s 155 165 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 240 F 6 229 230 231 235 T 164 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 233 157 9 10 11 12 13 228 w 152 153 154 5 151 213 T 163 29 30 31 s M 140 141 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 196 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 205 138 s AUGUST 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 198 137 15 16 17 18 JULY s s 1 97 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 107 F 98 96 *-* s JUNE MAY APRIL , , 212 31 OCTOBER s M T w T F s s M 274 276 277 278 279 280 281 1 310 311 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 6 7 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 317 318 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 303 304 30 31 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis T w T 305 306 307 1 275 DECEMBER NOVEMBER 2 3 312 313 314 F s 308 309 4 5 315 316 8 9 10 11 12 319 320 321 322 323 s M T w T F s 335 336 337 1 338 339 340 341 342 4 5 6 7 8 345 346 347 348 349 2 3 343 344 9 10 350 351 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 324 352 325 326 327 328 329 330 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 331 332 333 334 27 28 29 30 359 , . # t 353 354 355 356 357 358 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 360 361 362 363 364 365 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 STS2X BONDS TO FIT THE INVESTOR ,Usi5&&&5Sh5SKSSS55S5S5S555S5SSSSSfefe&&fea^^S^ Do you have an Investment “Policy in relation to bank reserves? PORTION of every bank’s funds must be readily obtainable when. ever needed. What suits one bank in this respect will not suit another. Much depends upon the character and source of deposits, the ma turity of loans, the nature of other assets, and the diversity of local business. A Cash and quick reserves are maintained, with a low earning power; loans and discounts compensate with a relatively high return. But both of these should be supported by a sound secondary reserve of marketable bonds earning a substantial rate of interest. It is possible to build a secondary reserve of a size and content which will yield a liberal income and still safeguard the bank in event of both probable and unforeseen demand. This is a problem in which we have had wide experience. We deal with thousands of banks, hundreds of whom depend upon us entirely for making and maintaining a sound investment structure for their secondary reserve. Security, maturity, and marketability are carefully worked out to fit the needs of each institution—in the light of its own local conditions. May we have the opportunity to explain the advantages of this service to you f HALSEY, STUART & CO. INCORPORATED CHICAGO 101 South La Salle St. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis ST. LOUIS 319 North 4th St. NEW YORK. 14 Wall St. PHILADELPHIA 111 South j 5th St. BOSTON 8s Devonshire St. DETROIT 601 Griswold St. MILWAUKEE 425 East Water St. CLEVELAND 925 Euclid Ave. MINNEAPOLIS 608 Second Ave., S. Aar % Mr _____ \ K II \\ % u < //""///. / I * \j ////'///////> % |\ . I * \\ Investment Facilities HIRTY-EIGHT YEARS of investment experience, nation-wide contact with financial conditions through offices in important cities, and a thoroughly trained personnel qualify A. B. Leach & Co., Inc., par ticularly well to recommend for investment securities that are especially suitable for banks. The facilities of this organization, systematically developed to render dependable service, are always available to banks, institutions and individual investors. T f|0 Inc. A. B. Leach & Co Inrestment Securities I friO MINNEAPOLIS BOSTON DETROIT CHICAGO NEW YORK Baker Building 209 Washington Street Buhl Building 39 S. La Salle Street 57 William Street TACOMA MILWAUKEE CLEVELAND BUFFALO PHILADELPHIA Washington Building Guardian Building First Wis. Nat’l Bk. Bldg. 935 Ellicott Square 115 S. 4th Street PORTLAND SEATTLE ST. LOUIS KANSAS CITY ALBANY Dexter Horton Building u S. Nat’l Bank Building Security Building Pioneer Trust Building 66 State Street SAN FRANCISCO LOS ANGELES SCRANTON PROVIDENCE, R. r. Van Nuys Building American Bank Building Mears Building Groavenor Building I I4Y- £•£) LLOYDS BANK LIMITED. HEAD OFFICE: LONDON, E.C. 3. The Bank has over 1,650 Offices in England and Wales, and several in India and Burmah. ($5=£1.) (30th June. 1926.) DEPOSITS, &c. ADVANCES, &c. - - - $1,683,186,795 $ 948,679,940 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 & SOUTH AMERICA LIMITED. LLOYDS & NATIONAL PROVINCIAL FOREIGN BANK LTD. CJ! ■ 1 *71 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org 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 WITH LIST OF BONDED ATTORNEYS THE BANKERS BLUE BOOK Official Numbering Agent for American Bankers Association JANUARY 1927 ------------- c>------------- A Consolidation of BANKERS DIRECTORY (Homan’s and Sharp & Alleman’s Edition) https://fraser.stlouisfed.org 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------------- 102nd EDITION » 55th YEAR Made in U. S. A. RAND M9NALLY & COMPANY CHICAGO Copyright, 1927 by Rand McNally a Company CONTENTS PAGE 1712 British Guiana—Attorneys_______________________ —Banks__ _________ 1598 —Map (map of South America)___________ ______ .opposite 1596 British Honduras—Attorneys. ____ ____________ ___________ 1711 —Banks...... ...................... ............. ....................................-...........1596 Buffalo, N. Y.—Map.................... .......................................opposite 902 Bulgaria—Attorneys................ 1706 —Banks..................... 1556 —Map (map of New Europe).......... ....... ........................ opposite 1538 California—Accessible Banking List............................... 1863 —Attorneys.—________ 1608 —Banks. _______ _______________________ ____ -............. 78 —Bank Directors______________________________________ 1972 —Laws________________________________________ ..1724 —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............................. 11 Cameroons (Kamerun)—(See French Equatorial Africa) Canada—Accessible Banking Points...................................... 1944 —Attorneys___________________________________________1700 1486 —Banks________ —Bank Directors________ 2315 —Laws_____ _________ 1836 —Map on Index “Canada”......... ......... .........................opposite 1486 Canadian Bankers Association Officers_______________________ 8 Canary Islands—Banks__________________________________ 1540 —Map (map of Africa)..................... .................. .............opposite 1540 Cape of Good Hope (see Union of South Africa)_______________ 1543 Cape of Verde Islands—Attorneys___________________________1704 —Banks...________ 1540 —Map (map of Africa)____________ ____________ opposite 1540 Cardinal Numbers and Commercial Terms in Ten Languages (Table of).......... ......... 17 Celebes—(See Dutch East Indies) Central A merica—Attorneys_____________ 1711 —Banks----------1596 Central Reserve Cities__ ____________ 19 Ceylon—A ttorneys_______________________________________1705 —Banks___ ____ 1546 Channel Islands—(See England) Chicago Map (central portion)______________ _______ opposite 256 Chile—Attorneys........ ................... 1712 —Banks_____________ 1598 —Map (Map of South America)__________________ opposite 1596 China—Attorneys______ 1705 —Banks.___ _______ 1546 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 ................................ -.................................. 1712 —Banks----------1599 —Map (Map of South America).............. ......................opposite 1596 Colorado—Accessible Banking Points________________________ 1866 —Attorneys...______ ____ 1611 —Banks______ 138 —Bank Directors__________________ 1982 —Laws_____ _________ 1728 —Map on Indef “Co!”____ __________ ____ —.........opposite 138 —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 ffhe National Banks........................opposite 11 (From September 9 1886, to date) Connecticut—Accessible Banking Points................................. 1867 —Attorneys............................................................ —...................1612 —Banks_____________________________________________ 153 —Bank Directors........ ................. ...1985 —Laws________________ 1731 —Map on Index “Conn”...... ............................... ............opposite 154 —State Bankers Association Officers_________ 8 (Members shown in Bank List by t after name of bank) —State Bank Officials and Bank Examiners____ ______________11 Consolidated Capitulation for January 1927 Statements...opposite 33 Correspondents...................................................... ..... ...................... (For each bank shown in Bank List under correspondents column) Corsica—(See France) Costa Rica—Attorneys__________________________________ 1711 —Banks______ 1596 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___ ______ 1613 —Banks_____________________________________________ 1484 —Bank Directors______________________________________2316 —Laws________ 1855 —Map (See Map of West Indies)............. ...................... opposite 1594 Cyprus—Attorneys______________________________________ 1705 —Banks_____________________________________________1548 ....1706 Czecho-Slovakia—Attorneys.............. —Banks_____ _____ .1556 —Map (map of New Europe)____________________ opposite 1538 Danzig—Banks_____________________ 1557 —Map (map of New Europe)____________________ opposite 1538 Dates of the Regular Meetings of the State Legislatures........ ......... 1714 Days of Grace__________ 18 Delaware—Accessible Banking Points................................................ 1868 —Attorneys___ ______________________________________ 1613 —Banks___ _____________ _________________ ______ 165 —Bank Directors................................. 1989 —Laws....................... .1734 —Map............................ ................................................opposite 166 —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____ ________________________________1706 —Banks_______ 1557 —Map (see map of New Europe)________ _____ ___ opposite 1538 Digest of Banking and Commercial Laws of the United States and Canada......................................... ..1715 Directors—(List of United States and Canadian Bank Directors)..1961 District of Columbia—Accessible Banking Points............................. 1868 —Attorneys________ 1613 —Banks................................................................... 168 PAGE Abstract of the Laws of the United States and Canada-------------- 1715 Abyssinia—Banks (See Ethiopia).................. -............ - —........... Accessible Banking Points to Non-bank Towns................................ 1859 Africa—Attorneys..---------- --------------- -------- -............................1704 —Map____ _________________ _________________ opposite 1540 Alabama—Accessible Banking Points............ .................... ...............l°o0 —Attorneys—----------- ----------------------------.................... .-----]005 —Banks......................................... ............................................. — —Bank Directors...----------------- --------------------- -----------—}961 —Laws,....... ......... .................. -.................-................................ -1715 —Map, on “ALA” Index__________________________ opposite 34 —State Bankers Association Officers----------------------------------° —(Members shown in Bank List by t after name of bank) —State Bank Officials and Bank Examiners........... ...................... 11 Alaska—Accessible Banking Points................ ...............................--1861 —Attorneys___ _______________ ___________ —.................... 1006 —Banks......... -..............................------------ ------------------------- 48 —Bank Directors—....................................—.................. ......... --1965 —Laws......................... ...............----------------- --------------—Map, on Alaska Index------------------ --------------------opposite 48 Albania—Banks...............................- - -------------- ----------- -------1554 —Map (Map of Europe)........................................ .............. ......... 1538 Alberta—Accessible Banking Points--------------1044 1700 —Attorneys--------------------—Map (Map of Canada)---------------------- --------------opposite 1486 Algeria—Attorneys........ ....... .............-.............------------------------1704 1540 —Banks---- ------American Bankers Association Officers............. ° (Members shown in Bank List by J 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_____________________________________________ 1540 —Map (see map of Africa)________________________opposite 1540 Angol a—Attorneys........ ......................................... ........................... 1704 —Banks------------------------------------------------------- —.............1540 Arabia—Banks------------------1546 Argentine Republic—Attorneys....... .... ..................... 1712 —Banks_______ ____ __________ ____ —......... .................. -.1597 —Map, on Map of South America_________________ opposite 1596 Arizona—Accessible Banking Points-------------1861 —Attorneys----- ---------------- ------------...................................... 1006 — Banks........... ...............................-......... -.................-................ ,50 —Bank Directors_________________________ ___________— 1965 —Laws_______________________________________________1719 —Map on Index “ Ariz.”___________________________ opposite 50 —State Bankers Association Officers—............ -.......................... 8 (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_________________________________ 1607 —Banks----- ---------,53 —Bank Directors........... ........... .................-........... -.........-...........1966 —Laws----- ------";1721 —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....................-...................----------- ------------------ 170j —Banks----------- ------------------------- ------............................... 1546 Associations—American Bankers (Officers of;---------------- -------- 8 (Members shown in Bank List by • after name of bank) —Financial Advertisers Association................. 10 —Investment Bankers Association of America Officers---------- 10 —Mortgage Association of America (Officers)------------------------- 10 (Members shown in Investments Lists by a 1) —State Bankers Associations Officers------------------ --------------- 8-9 (Members shown in Bank List by t after name of bank) Forneys—United States and Canada (Bonded)-------------1605 ‘-Foreign Countries--------- --------------------- ----------- —...........1704 -stralasia—Attorneys.....................-...................................... .........1705 /—Banks______ ________ _____ -................................................ 1551 ustrla—Attorneys..................... -.............-...................................... 1705 _Banks______________________________________________ 1554 —Map (Map of New Europe).............. ......... .............opposite 1538 Azores Islands—Attorneys...---------- ---------------------.................. 1704 _Banks - __________________________ 1540 —Map (Map of Africa) III......................... -...................opposite 1540 B ahamas—Attorneys------ ---------------------------- -.............-...........1711 —Banks...............................................-.............---...............-----1596 —Map (Map of West Indies).......... ....... ......... —...........opposite 1594 Baluchistan—Banks.............. 1546 Bank Directors of the United States and Canada.......... ........... 1961 Bank Examiners and State Bank Officials-------------------------11, 12, 13 Bank Examiners (National)----------------------------------------------- 14!,}? Barbados—Attorneys_____________________________________ 1711 —Banks....... ...........-.................. .................-............................ —Map (West Indies)......................... -......... -...............opposite 1594 Basutoland—Banks------------------------ ----------- ---......... ......... . - - J 540 —Map (Map of Africa)......... ................................... ....... opposite 1540 Bechuanaland—Banks------------------------------------------- ------—1540 —Map (Map of Africa)................................. .................opposite 1540 Belgian Congo—Attorneys----------------------------------.................... 1704 —Banks............................ -........................ ....................... ............1540 —Map (Map of Africa)..................................................opposite 1540 Belgium—Attorneys---------------------------------------------------------- 170o —Banks-------------------------------------- --------------- ---.........r--1555 —Map (Map of New Europe)........ ............................... .opposite 1538 Bermudas—Attorneys.............................................. 1711 —Banks...................... ..................---.............................................1596 Bolivia—Attorneys....................... -........... -.....................................-1712 —Banks-------- ---------------------------------------------------------- ,--1597 —Map (map of South America)-----------oppositel596 Borneo— (See Dutch East Indies) Brazil—Attorneys---------------1712 —Banks..........................-...................................... -.................. - - -1598 —Map (map of South America)___________________ opposite 1596 British Columbia—Accessible Banking Points---------------------------1946 —Attorneys......... ........................... -......... ....................................1700 —Banks..................................................................-.................... -1490 —Bank Directors....... ...... 2315 —Laws----------------------------1839 —Map (map of Canada)__________________ _______opposite 1486 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 2 CONTENTS—(Continued) District of Columbia—(Continued) PAGE —Bank Directors.................... _................. 1990 —Laws..................... :::_:::::::i735 —Map, Indexed “D. C.”_________ __________ ____ opposite 168 —State Bankers Association Officers................ . 8 (Members shown in Bank List by a t after name of bank) 7 Domestic Money Orders (see Postage Rates) Dominican Republic—Attorneys.......................... 1711 —Banks......... .......................................................1111111111111111596 —Map (see map of West Indies)--------------- ------------ opposite 1594 Dominion of Canada (map of), indexed “Canada”........ .opposite 1486 Dutch East Indies—Attorneys 1705 —Banks............................................. ."""I ”” "H1548 Dutch Guiana—Banks________________ 1599 —Map (see map of South America)...HI.111.1111111opposite 1596 Ecuador—Attorneys........................................ 1712 —Banks--------------------------------------------------1599 —Map (see Map of South America)..........IIIIIIIIIIIopposirte'l596 Egypt—Attorneys....................... ....... 1704 —Banks......................... .................... ................1540 —Map (see Map of Africa)....................... IIIIIIIIHIIopposite' 1540 _ 1706 England and Wales—Attorneys____ —Banks.................. 1558 —Map on London Index...............I"”"I""”":"8ppo'sitVl568 Eritrea—Banks_________________ 1541 —Map (See Map of Africa).™"'""““""“"""oppoTiteTl540 Estonia—Banks................................................ 1578 —Map (see Map of New Europe)___ ”"I”II"”"opposUe’l538 Ethiopia (Abyssinia)—Banks. 1540 —Map (Map of Africa).................... """"""""“opposite' 1540 1705 Europe—Attorneys...................... —Banks...._______ 1554 —Map indexed “Foreign”................... ....................'onnosite' 1538 Examiners and Districts (National)... ........ .........opposite i03» Examiners (State and State Bank Officials)-"'fl'12' 13 Express Money Order Rates (see Postage Rates)______ ’ 7 32 Federal Farm Loan Board_____________ Federal Land Banks and their data_____ 39 (Also listed in Bank List in Cities where located)...................... 20 Federal Reserve—Advisory Council_____ —Advisory Board.......... ..............................J 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) wlth'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 258 Federal Reserve Districts in which Banking Town "is loca’t’e’d" (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._______ _ 1548 Fernando Po—(see Spanish Guinea) Fiji Islands—Attorneys............. ......... 1705 —Banks.................................................. " .............. 1551 Financial Advertisers Association_______I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 10 Finland—Attorneys______________________________________ 1708 —Banks__________________________________ _ _ ” 1578 —Map (see Map of New Europe)____ IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIl538 Florida—Accessible Banking Points___ 1868 —Attorneys.............................................................IIIIIIIIIIIIII1613 —Banks_____ _______ 174 —Bank Directors________ . ' 1991 -Laws................................... ::::::::::::::::::::::"i737 —State Bankers Association Offlc’ersl 11.........................opposite 174 (Members shown in Bank List by a t after name of bank) —State Bank Officials and Bank Examiners________________ 11 Foreign Attorneys (Selected List)... 1704 ” Banks.......................................... . .............. 1540 “ Coins (Value of).............. .......... .......... ' i6 Foreign Languages (Table of cardinal numbers and" coin-"............ mercial terms in ten languages) 17 Foreign Parcel Post Rates ..............'........... 7 Foreign Postal Table........... ...................... ~— 7 France—Attorneys_______ i7nn —Banks....... .................. ......... IIIIIIIIIIII.................... ............ 1573 —Map (see Map of New Europe).......... .......... onnosite"1538 French Equatorial Africa opposite 1548 —Banks....... ........................... _1541 Map (Map of Africa) ___ ...____ onnosite 1540 French Guiana—Banks............................................................opposuerow of.?°uth America)....... ""'"opposite 1596 French Indo China—Attorneys.......... ............... 1705 —Banks------- '__________ _________________ ” 1548 French Somoliland—Banks.............. _ 1541 Map (See Map of Africa)----------- r"...'..!""""."“oppo's'ite 1540 Freacn West Africa—Attorneys______________ _ 1704 —Banks __ ... ..... 1541 —Map (see Map of Africa).. ..-"."I!!"."."."."!!!!!!"""!!!""""! 1540 Gambia—Attorneys........... ............. 1704. —Banks____ ____ ______ _____ Map (see Map of Africa)------------------------------------------ opposite1540 Georgia—Accessible Banking Points________________ . _ 1869 —Attorneys___________ _______ _ .. ~ir,i4 —Banks--------------------------- ... ” 900 —Bank Directors........................ "1995 -Laws...................... ..................... Map on Ga. Index ......__..... onnosite 200 -State Bankers Associations Officers. miHIHim HI_PE___ g (Members shown in Bank List by a t after name of bank) —State Bank Officials and Bank Examiners_________________ 11 Germany—Attorneys____ ________________________________ 1709 —Banks_____ ___________ 1582 —M.aP (see Map of New Europe)!" I""" """"Opposite" 1538 Gibraltar (see Spam)_______ _ Goa—Attorneys........................... . _""!!!"."_"!""!!. . .”""""'"! 1705 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 3 PAGE Gold Coast and Ashanti—Attorneys............ ir/04 —Banks_____________________________ 154X —Map (see Map of Africa).............. .............................opposit"e'l540 Grace on Sight Drafts for the United States and Canada . 18 Greece—Attorneys__________________ 1709 —Banks----------------------------------------- -------------!!!!!!! 1584 —Map (see Map of New Europe)__________________opposite 1538 Grenada—Attorneys___________ ______________ . 1711 —Map (see Map of West Indies)........ ....................... !!opposite 1594 Guadaloupe—Attorneys_______________ 1711 —Banks.............................. 1596 —Map (See Map of West Indies)_________ _______ opposite 1594 Guatamala—Attorneys_____________ ________ _ . 1711 —Banks......... ...................... .................................... ."!"!!" 1596 Haiti—Attorneys_________________________ 1711 —Banks___________________________________ * 1596 —Map (see Map of West Indies)............!.!!!!!!!!!.opposite" 1594 Hawaii—Accessible Banking Points____ 1870 —Attorneys............................ !!!I!!!!!!!!l617 —Banks_______________________________ _ 232 —Bank Directors.___ _________ !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"”2002 Map, indexed * Hawaii”____..... opposite 232 Holidays (See Interest Rates,Grace on Sight Drafts,'Etc 18 (See also Laws for Legal Holidays) Holland—Attorneys___________________ 1709 —Banks............................. ""l585 T — Map (see Map of New Europe)....................!!!!!"!opposite' 1538 Honduras—Attorneys_ i7ii —Banks....... ............................................... ................................. Honkong—Banks.............................. 1705 Hungary—Attorneys.......................... ............... .................. 1710 —Banks..................... {585 —Map (see Map of New Europe)......................... ...........opposite 1538 Iceland—Attorneys_________ 17m —Banks........................ ............................_!......... ...................... 1585 —Map—(see Map of New Europe)____________ I ...opposite" 1538 Idaho—Accessible Banking Points________ .. i87i —Attorneys____ _______ 1617 —Banks.____________________________ 233 —Bank Directors................................. 1...................... 2003 —Laws—___________ ______________ !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 1742 Map, Indexed Idaho”...__ ......... onnn^itp 234. —State Bankers AssociationOfficers____ g (Members shown in Bank List by a 1 after name"of bank)" —State Bank Officials and Bank Examiners_________________ 11 Illinois—Accessible Banking Points 1079 —Attorneys............................... ............................................ —Banks.............. ...............................!!!!!!!!----------------------- 241 —Bank Directors_____ ______ ______ ____ __ !!!!!!!!!! 2005 -Laws. .1743 —Map, Indexed “Illinois"............................. onn'n’sife ?40 Map of Chicago (Central portion)......... ........... .........omiosite 256 Map of Federal Reserve District 7.......... ............ oddosRp 258 —State Bankers Association Officers........ ............ opposite 40» (Members shown in Bank List by a 1 after name of "bank")""" —State Bank Officials and Bank Examiners... 11 India—Attorneys____________________________ !!!!!!!!!!!! 1705 —Banks__________________________ 1548 Indiana—Accessible Banking Points.. 1874 -Attorneys............................. -!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!i623 —Banks_______ 352 —Bank Directors............. ............_IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIl2027 —Laws___ ______________ ____________________ * 1747 —£Jap—piTd^ed "Iwd”..............................................""opposite 352 Map of Indianapolis .............. ...................... opposite 374 —State Bankers Association Officers.. . _ 8 (Members shown in Bank List by a t after na'me'of bank) —State Bank Officials and Examiners______________________ n Indianapolis Atap.____ _____ .... onnosite 374 Interest Rates (table of)........... "..........................................opposite 374 (Also found under Laws of each state) ............. Interest Rates by contract_________________ 18 International Money Orders_______ "llllll 7 Investment Bankers Association... io (Members shown bv a 1 in Investment Lists’) .................... Investment Dealers (Selected List) (Following banks in each city where listed) Ionian Islands—(See Greece) Iowa—Accessible Banking Points_____ 1370 -Attorneys......................... """""'.""1626 —Banks—_______________________ 4Q4 —Bank Directors............. ....... .............I-""""""! 2039 —Laws--------------------------------------------------------------1750 ~Map-indexed “Iowa” ........................-I!!”"opposite 404 8 —State Bankers Association Officers (Members shown in Bank list by a t after name-of bank).......... —State Bank Officials and Examiners_________ __________ 11 Irak—Banks..................................................... ‘ 1549 Irish Free State and Northern Ireland—Attorneys”!""............... 1716 —Banks................................. .. .......... 1535 °lNe,w Europe) .. III11!!!! III! 11 Hopposite" 1538 Italian Somaliland—Banks_______ 1541 .. ~rMa„.pJsee Map of Africa)~ -........... IIIIIIIII III lopposi’te" 1540 Italy—Attorneys.._____ i7in —Banks----------------------1586 —Map (see Map of New Europe)------------ "opposite" 1538 Jamaica—Attorneys___________________________________ 1711 -Banks. .1596 —Map (see Map of West Indies).H""""”"""I8pposIte" 1594 Japan—Attorneys________ 1795 —Banks................................... .IIIIIIII""".......................... 1549 Java—(See Dutch East Indies) Johore—Banks............ .......... 1550 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.......... ................... lfiqi —Banks........................................ I............................... .............. 470 —Bank Directors.......................... IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII2057 -Laws. .1752 Map, indexed “Kans.”___________ ___ ODnosIte 478 —State Bankers Association, Officers...... .......... V g (Members shown in Bank List by a J after name of "bank")" —State Bank Officials and Examiners................. n Kabinda—Banks................................................_ 1541 Ke"dalh-BaSnksm.!.P.°f.:Y.f.riCa:..............................................................1540 Kelanton—Banks.................................. III”! ...................................1550 Kentucky—Accessible Banking Points"."”".""”'."."". 1878 —Banks-------- -------------------- 529 CONTENTS—(Continued) Kentucky—(Continued) —Map,"indexed “Ky."—.................. ............. —................opposite 530 —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............................................................................. —1704 __Banks ______________ -_______________________________ 1541 —Map (see map of Africa^_______________________ opposite 1540 Kingdom of the Serbs, Croates and Slovenes (Yugo Slavia) —Attorneys......................... ........................................................... _Banks ___________ -_____________ ____ _4_______looo —Map (see "Map”of"New'Europe~------------------------- opposite 1538 Latvia or Lettonia—Banks.................... ....................................... ---l£°8 —Map (see Map of New Europe)................... -......... ...opposite lo38 Laws of the United States and Canada (Digest of)...........................1715 Lawyers of the United States and Canada (Bonded).........................1506 Lawyers of Foreign Countries (Selected List).......................,......... 1»5« Leeward Islands—Attorneys.—...........................................................i'i“ __Banks______________________________________________ - - - lowo —Map (see Map of West Indies)----------------------------- opposite 1594 Legal Rate of Interest (Table of).....................................—........... 18 (See also Laws) ,_ , . 171, Legislatures (Dates of Regular Meetings)........................................... 1714 Liberia—Attorneys.....................................................-..........................- J i .1541 —Banks. -Map (see Map of Africa).....................-......................... opposite 1540 Libya—Attorneys-------------------------------------------------1704 _Banks _ ____________________________________________ io4i —Map (see"Map of Africa)----------------------------------- opposite 1540 Liecht enst ein-Banks —..................... ............................................15»» —Map (See Map of New Europe)........................ ........................-.1538 Lithuania—Banks--------------------------------------------------------------- 1588 —Map (see Map of New Europe)............................................... ...1538 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---------- ---------- -............................... -........................... 153/ —Banks................................................................................................. 556 —Bank Directors............. -..................-....................................... ---fO'8 __Laws___________________________________________________ —Map—indexed “La.”------------------------------------------- opposite 556 —State Bankers Association, Officers------- -------8 (Members shown in Bank List by a t after name of bank) —State Bank Officials and Examiners.......... ............ ll Luxembourg—Attorneys------------------------------------------------------- J L __Banks ______________________________________ 15»9 —Map (see Map of New Europe).................................... opposite rn 538 Madagascar Island—Attorneys..............................................................4 '04 __Banks________________________________ -______________ —Map (see Map of Africa)................................................ opposite 1540 Madeira Island—Attorneys................................................................... -1704 __Banks________________________________________________ _ —Map (see Map of Africa)------------------------------------- opposite 1540 Maine—Accessible Banking Points................... —.............................. 1885 —Attorneys............................................................................................ 1538 —Banks.............................. -.........................-..................................... 572 —Bank Directors............-......................................... ............... ......... f08f _Laws_________________________________________________ .1* ”9 —Map, indexed "Me.”____________________________ opposite 572 —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......................................................................................1710 _Banks - ___________________________________________ _ —Map (see'Map"of’New "Europe).".................................. opposite 1538 Manitoba—Accessible Banking Points.................................................. 1947 —Attorneys...................... 1700 —Banks.............................. -..................................... -......................... —Bank Directors—................ -...........................................................fjjio ——T jAW9 __________________ ___ _ _ _____________________ - —-----------1 1 —Map—I —.................. -................-............. opposite 1492 Martinique—Attorneys........................................................................ __Banks_________________________________________________ lay —Map (see Slap of West Indies)----------------------------- opposite 1594 Maryland—Accessible Banking Points.................................................. 1887 —Attorneys________________ ______________ -......................... 1539 —Banks.............. -......................... -...................................................... 579 —Bank Directors—.............................................-..............-............. 2084 _-Laws __ _ _ __ _ _ ____ _ _ ______ __17 —Map,"indexed"“Sid."” "II.................................. ........opposite 580 8 —State Bankers Association, Officers........................ (Members shown in Bank List by a t after name of bank) —State Bank Officials and Examiners............ ............ 11 Massachusetts—Accessible Banking Points------------------- ------------1888 —Attorneys........................................................-........................... ---1640 —Banks------------------------------593 —Bank Directors..........-...................... —..........................................2088 —Laws.------____ ....._________________ _______________ 1764 —Map, indexed “Mass.”.............................. ......................opposite 592 —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.................................................... -............-......... 1704 __Banks_________________________________________________ 1541 —Map (see Map of Africa)----------------- ------- ------------opposite 1540 Mesopotamia (See Irak)------------------------------------------------------Mexico—Attorneys.............................. -.................... -------- ------------- 4 ‘4 4 __Banks_____ _____________ _ _ _______ -_______ - _ _ _ ____ __l oo o —Map, indexed “Mexico”________________________ opposite 1536 Michigan—Accessible Banking Points...................................... -..........1890 —Attorneys________________ -..............-........................... ............1041 —Banks________________________________________________ 617 —Bank Directors-----------------------------2096 —Laws__________________________________________________ 1766 —Map, indexed “Mich.”.....................................................opposite 618 —State Bankers Association, Officers----------8 (Members shown in Bank List by t after name of bank) —State Bank Officials and Examiners................. 12 Minneapolis, Minn., (Map).............. ..................................... opposite 696 Minnesota—Accessible Banking Points------------------------------------- 1892 —Attorneys—.......... ........ 1644 —Banks.......... ......... ......................................................-......................663 —Bank Directors.................................................................................. 2105 —Laws__________________________________________________ 1769 —Map, indexed “Minn.”_____________ _____ ________opposite 662 —Map of Minneapolis_____________________________ opposite 696 —Map of St. Paul...................................................................opposite 712 —State Bankers Association, Officers-----------------------------------8 —(Members shown in Bank List by J after name of bank) —State Bank Officials and Examiners................. —--—............. 12 Mississippi—Accessible Banking Points________________________1893 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Mississippi—(Continued) —Attorneys—.................................... ......................................... ......... —Banks................................................................................... ............. —Bank Directors.................... ...................-..........-...........................f A™ _Laws __________________________________ *___________ 1 —Maps, indexed "Miss.”--------------- ------------------------- opposite 722 —State Bankers Association, Officers..—...............------........... 8 —(Members shown in Bank List by t after name of bank) —State Bank Officials and Examiners............................................. 44 Missouri—Accessible Banking Points................................................... i8^ —Attorneys.....................-..........-....................................... ............... 4 2 2 « —Banks............................. -...................... ............... -......................... —Bank Directors....................................-............... -............. -......... fiSo __Laws ________________ -____________________________ _ —Map, indexed "Mo." ........................................... _..opposite can —Map of St Louis----------------------------------------------- opposite 800 —State Bankers Association, Officers.——........— -------.......... 8 (Members shown in Bank List by t after name of bank) —State Bank Officials and Examiners........................ -................ Moluca Islands (See Dutch East Indies).................... ..................... Monaco—Attorneys-------------- - - —----- -.----...................................4'42 Money Orders (International and Domestic)...................................... • Montana—Accessible Banking Points------------------J"?? —Attorneys------------------------------------- ---------------------- -......... 4 x'?? —Banks................ 0°4? —Bank Directors................................................................................. fiSi __Laws _______ ______ _ _____----------------»---- ----------------- -*• * ^ —Map, indexed “Mont."---------------------------------------opposite 814 —State Bankers Association, Officers------------------8 (Members shown in Bank List by t after name of bank) —State Bank Officials and Examiners............................................... 4“ Morocco—Attorneys................................................................................ jiV? jinks -i ox i —Map (see Map of Africa)------------------------------------- opposite 1540 Mortgage Association of America. ------------------ -----------------------Mozambique—Attorneys ------- ---------------------------------------------- AlYx __Banks _ - ______________ -______________ —Map (see map of Africa)------------------------------------opposite 1540 Natal. See Union of South Africa---------------------------------------------- it National Bank, Examiners and Districts——.-------------------- ---.;44 A2 National Banks (number of) (on Page 32 D)---------------- opposite 33 Nearest—Accessible Banking Points..................................................... 482“ Nebraska—Accessible Banking Points------------------------ ---------—Attorneys........... ............. ................................................................. 4 222 —Banks..................................................-....................... -................. Laws ____ _________________ ________ ----- -------------- * • —Map, indexed "Neb.”------------------------- ---------- -—opposite 824 —State Bankers Association, Officers.—.—------ ----------------8 (Members shown in Bank List by J after name of bank) —State Bank Officials and Examiners.............................................. 4“ Negotiable Instruments Law (States having)...... ......................... — (Also see Laws.) , Nevada—Accessible Banking Points........... ..................................... —Attorneys........................................... -........................-........... ........ —Banks....................................-........................................................... —Bank Directors........................-..........................................-........... ?155 __Laws_________________________________________________ _ —Map, indexed “Nev.”-----------------------------------------opposite 866 —State Bankers Association, Officers..—--.............-------.......... 8 (Members shown in Bank List by t after name of bank) —State Bank Officials and Examiners.................................. -......... if New Britain—Banks............................................. .................................4 §51 New Brunswick—Accessible Banking Points------------------------------194/ —Attorneys........... ........................ 1799 —Banks....................................-..................-.......................................42*f —Maiff---... --............................................................... opposite 1498 New Caledonia—Attorneys..................................................................... __Banks _ _____________________ ___________________ __looi Newfoundland—Accessible Banking Points.------------------------------4949 —Attorneys...... .................................—.............................................4' xx -Banks.......... —............. -............................-................................... 44?8 .uiiovwio__________ 2315 —Di rectors . —Map on map of Canada-------- ------- -------- ------------opposite I486 New Hampshire—Accessible Banking Points..................... -..............I960 —Attorneys.............-................................................ -......................... 1659 —Banks..........................................................................-..................... 888 —Bank Directors......................................... fl55 __Laws _ ____ _ _ _ _ _ ________________ -____ -___ l / 0& —Map, Indexed “N. EL”___________________________ opposite 868 —State Bankers Association, Officers—-........................................ 8 Members shown in Bank List by t after name of bank) Itate Bank Officials and Examiners........ -..................... -........... if New Ireland—Banks_________________ ___________ -......... -* noRt New Jersey—Accessible Banking Points.......................... 1991 —Attorneys...................... —..............................................................1659 —Banks................................................................ -............................... °72 —Bank Directors______________ _______-....................... -........... f!57 __Laws __________ ____________l • oo —M ap,"indexed"" N."J2- - - ...............-..............opposite 872 —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----------- ---------- ----------- i»9f —Attorneys........... ..................... ..............................---............... "coo —Banks—...........................................................................-........... 898 —Bank Directors..................................... -............................. -......... flbb __Laws ______________________ .1 /oo —Map,"i"ndexed "N."M.”"."—- — — — — — — -................ opposite 894 —State Bankers Association, Officers....................... .. 8 (Members shown fn Bank List by t after name of bank) —State Bank Officials and Examiners--------- ------------------------- 12 New South Wales—Attorneys.—....................................... -..............1795 —Banks ...............................-.............. -..................-..........................1551 New York—Accessible Banking Points................................................. 1993 —Attorneys............. ....................................................-......................-1661 —Banks.......................................... -....................... -........................... f96 —Bank Directors............-........................-......................... -........... -fl66 __Laws ___________ ________ l i o / —Map.'indexed" N."Y.------------opposite 896 —Map of Buffalo............... opposite 902 —Map of N. Y. City (Southern Portion)........................ .opposite 920 —Map of Greater New York and Vicinity------------------opposite 924 —Savings Bank Association of the State of New York-----------9 —State Bankers Association, Officers---------- ------- ------........... 9 (Members shown in Bank List by t after name of bank) —State Bank Officials and Examiners................ -............. ....... . 12 New York City Map (Southern Portion)..............................opposite 920 New York City Map (Greater New York and Vicinity)-.opposite 924 New Zealand—Attorneys.......................................... -...........................1705 —Banks_________________________________________________1552 Nicaragua—Attorneys..............................................................................J7 4 4 —Banks—............................................................................... -......... 1596 Nigeria—Attorneys. ...............—................-....................................... 1'04 4 CONTENTS—(Continued)____________________________________________ 5 Nigeria—(Continued) PAGE —Banks......... ...................... ...................................................... ...1542 —Map. (See Map of Africa)_________ __________ opposite 1540 North America, (except U. S. and Canada) Attorneys ..............1711 North America (except U. S. and Canada) Banks_____________1596 Northern Territory—Banks............... .................. ............................. 1553 North Carolina—Accessible Banking Points.....................................1909 —Attorneys_________ ....... .1664 —Banks........... ........... .................................... ...................... ___ 980 —Bank Directors___.... 2184 —Laws.. . .. ___ ____ ________ __ _______ _________ ..1790 —Map. indexed "N. Car.”______ ____ ____ ____ ..opposite 982 —State Bankers Association, Officers.. ._ . ________ _____ 9 (Members shown in Bank List by t after name of bank) —State Bank Officials and Examiners... ............................. 13 North Dakota—Accessible Banking Points.. ............................. ..1911 —Attorneys.................................................................. ... .............. 1666 —Banks......... .............................. ......................... ......................1010 —Bank Directors.............. ............ ................ . .. _____ ...2192 —Laws____ ________ . ................................. ..........................1792 —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.. ..................................................... ............... .1710 —Banks_________ ____ _ . ................................... .............1589 —Map (see Map of New Europe)____ ___________ opposite 1538 Notes and Acceptances due on Holidays_____ .. ____________ 18 Notes and Acceptances due on Half Days______________ ____ 18 Nova Scotia—Accessible Banking Points. .................................... .1950 —Attorneys............................................... ......... ............................ 1701 —Banks______ ________ . . . 1498 —Bank Directors....................... 2315 —Laws........ 1844 —Map. _______ . .. .. _____________________opposite 1498 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......................... 1704 —Bank............. .1542 —Map (see Map of Africa). _____________________opposite 1540 Ohio—Accessible Banking Points.............. ..1911 —Attorneys____ 1668 —Banks 1034 —Bank Directors_______ _________ _________ _________ 2198 —Laws_____ .. ........ ................................................. v.............. 1795 —Map, indexed "Ohio” _______________________ opposite 1034 (Members shown in Bank List by t after name of bank) —State Bank Officials and Examiners___ _________ ______ 13 Oklahoma—Accessible Banking Points............ ...............................1915 —Attorneys......... ....................... ........................... ... .................. .1672 —Banks................................................... .............. .................... .1094 —Bank Directors............................................... .2211 —Laws............. ............................. ............................................. .1798 —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 ................... 1701 —Banks.................. 1500 —Bank Directors.......... 2316 —Laws................. 1847 —Map____ ____ _____ ___ _________ . _______opposite 1514 Orange Free States (see Union of South Africa)____________ 1544 Oregon—Accessible Banking Points.............. .1917 —Attorneys............ .1674 —Banks......... .1130 —Bank Directors......................... 2219 —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___ _____ _________ _ 1705 —Banks___ _ . 1550 Parcel Post Kates (Table of Foreign and Domestic)................ ... 7 Panama—Attorneys.................... ........................................................1711 —Banks............................................................ Papua—Attorneys..._______________________ —Banks............ .1553 Paraguay—Attorneys............... 1712 —Banks... ______________________________ —Map (see Bank of South America).......................... ..opposite 1596 Pennsylvania—Accessible Banking Points......................... —Attorneys................................................. —Banks................ 1142 —Bank Directors............................................... —Laws------------- ................................ ..................................... 1804 —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 J after name of bank) —State Bank Officials and Examiners_________ 13 Persia—Attornevs 1705 —Banks........... 1550 Peru—Attorneys..................................................... 1712 —Banks-------------------------------- ---------- --------------------- ...1599 —Map (see Map of South America)________ ______ .opposite 1596 Philadelphia. Pa.. Map (main portion) onpnsit.e 118R Philadelphia. Pa., and Vicinitv. Man opposite 1182 Philippine Islands—Attorneys........ 1679 —Banks........ 1485 —Laws.................. 1806 —Map----------------------- ------------------------ ------------ opposite 1484 Pittsburgh. Pa.. Mao (main portion) .. . _ opposite 1198 Poland—Attorneys.......... 1710 —Banks-------------------------------1589 —Map (see Map of New Europe). ................... ...........opposite 1538 Population of Banking Towns shown by figures under name of Bank List and before town in Lawyers List. Portugal—Attorneys.. . .. ________ 1710 —Banks.......................... .1590 —Map (see Map of New Europe).............. ................. .opposite 1538 Postage Rates and Regulations................ 7 Porto Rico—Attorneys............................................................. ......... 1679 —Banks______ _ ________________ _____ _____ _ 1485 —Map (see Map of West Indies)__________________ opposite 1594 Prince Edward Island—Accessible Banking Points.................. ... 1955 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Prince Edward Island—(Continued) PAGE —Attorneys....................... 1702 —Banks________ 1518 —Laws______ ____ ___________ __________ ____ .. 1850 —Map________ ____ _________ .. _____ _ ..opposite 1498 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....................... .......................1955 —Attorneys___________________________ _____ __________1702 —Banks......................................................... ..................................1519 —Bank Directors_______ _ _____________ ________ ..2316 —Laws............. ............................... ................................................ 1851 —Map...... ... .................................................... . ........ opposite 1524 Queensland—Attorneys............................................ . .......... 1705 —Banks___ ____________ ... . ..................... ................ 1553 Rates of Postage (Domestic and Foreign)___ ________ ______ 7 Rates for Express Money Orders.............. ........................... ........... 7 Rates of Parcel Postage_____ ___ ___________ ______________ 7 Republic of Panama—Banks...... ...... ... ........................................1596 Reserve Cities and Central Reserve Cities.............. ................... 19 Reserves Required under Federal Reserve Act................................ 19 Reunion—Attorneys............................... .. ____ _______ 1704 —Banks_____ 1542 1925 Rhode Island—Accessible Banking Points_____ —Attorneys............ .1680 —Banks.____ .. _____________ ________ ______ ___ 1223 —Bank Directors......... . ..................................... . .......... .......2246 —Laws............. ........ ............................................................ ...1806 —Map indexed “R. I.” ............... ........... .................... .opposite 1224 —State Bankers Association, Officers___ _________________ 9 (Members shown in Bank List by t after name of bank) —State Bank Officials and Examiners............ ........................ . 13 Rhodes—Banks _________________ ________________ 1550 Rhodesia—Attorneys______ 1704 —Banks.......... 1542 —Map (see Map of Africa).._______ ____ ________ opposite 1540 Romania—Attorneys.................................................................... 1710 —Banks________ 1590 —Map (see Map of New Europe)___ ____________ opposite 1538 Russia—See Union of Socialistic Soviet Republic............. opposite 1538 St. Croix—Attorneys................................. ...1712 —Banks______ ...1597 —Map (see Map of West Indies)___________ ____ opposite 1594 St. Louis, Mo., Map ____________________ ________opposite 800 St. Paul, Minn., Map................ ................................... . .opposite 712 St. Pierre et Miquelon—Banks.......... ......... ................ ........... ... .1532 —Map (Map of Dominion of Canada)____________.opposite 1486 St. Thomas—Banks................................................ ....... ............ ...1597 —Map (see Map of West Indies).................................. .opposite 1594 Salvador—Attorneys......... ............ 1711 —Banks..._______ . _____________ _____ ______ _____ 1596 —Map (see West Indies)________________________ opposite 1594 Samoa Island—Attorneys._____ 1705 —Banks______________________________________ .1553 Saskatchewan—Accessible Banking Points............ ..1959 —Attorneys______________ 1703 —Banks...... .................. 1532 —Bank Directors____ 2316 —Laws........................... ...1853 —Map...................................... ...... ................. ............... opposite 1492 Savings Department (Banks Having) (Shown in Bank List by a © after name of bank) Scotland—Attorneys......... 1710 —Banks_______ 1590 —Map (see Map of New Europe)...................................opposite 1538 Senegal— (see French West Africa) Siam—Attorneys............... 1705 —Banks....................... 1550 Siberia—Banks........... ..1550 Sierra Leone—At torneys_____ ..1704 —Banks................ 1542 —Map (see Map of Africa)..............................................opposite 1540 South America—Attorneys __________ 1712 1597 —Banks________________ —Map, indexed “So. Am.”______________ ______ ..opposite 1596 South Australia—Attorneys........ 1705 —Banks_____________________________ 1553 —Banks.. ............................. .................................................... 1226 1596 —Laws........ ...1809 1705 —Map, indexed “S. C.”...................................... .............opposite 1226 —State Bankers Association, Officers.......... ................................. 9 (Members shown in Bank List by t after name of bank) 1599 —State Bank Officials and Examiners....................... ... ............. 13 South Dakota—Accessible Banking Points.......... ....................... ..1927 1917 —Attorneys......... 1681 1675 —Banks.............. 1244 —Bank Directors................ ..2251 2222 —Laws......................... ......... ................................... ............ .........1812 —State Bankers Association Officers______ ... __________ 9 (Members shown in Bank List by t after name of bank) —State Bank Officials and Examiners..................... . . . ... 13 South West Africa—Banks............... 1542 —Map (See Map of Africa) .............................................oppositel540 Spain—Attorneys------------1711 —Banks___ ____ _ _ __________________ ______ ______ 1593 —Map (see Map of New Europe)............ ................ ..... opposite 1538 Snanish Guinea—Banks___ 1542 (Members shown in Bank List by J after name of bank) 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........ 1705 —Banks.......... 1551 Sumatra—(see Dutch East Indies) Swaziland—Banks . ............................................................. .........1542 —Map (see Map of Africa)______ ________________ opposite 1540 Sweden—Attorneys.............. 1711 —Banks....... ........................................................................ ... .1594 — Map (see Map of New Europe)_________________ opposite 1538 Switzerland—Attorneys________ ..1711 -Banks......................................... 1594 -••Map (see Map of New Europe).............. .................. .opposite 1538 Svria—Attornevs__ __ ____ _ .1705 Table of Cardinal Numbers and Commercial Terms in ten languages............................................... Tahiti—Attorneys............................ —Banks................ 17 .1705 1553 CONTENTS—(Continued) 6 PAGE Taiwan (Formosa) (see Japan) Tanganyika Territory—Banks..,------------------------------------ -— 1542 —Map (see Map of Africa)______________________ opposite 1540 Tasmania—Attorneys---------------------------------—........................ 1705 —Banks....... ..........---------1553 Tennessee—Accessible Banking Points------------1927 —Attorneys............. 1593 —Banks.................-....... :------------------ ---------......... ....... ...........1262 —Bank Directors................................... -.............-.................... ..22o8 —Laws................................ ...1814 —Map____ __________________________ ________ opposite 1262 —State Bankers Association, Officers.......................................... 9 (Members shown in Bank List by a t after name of bank) —State Bank Officials and Examiners............................... -........... 13 Texas—Accessible Banking Points----------------------------------------- 1929 —Attorneys---- ------1685 —Banks______________________________________________ 1291 —Bank Directors................. ...................... ----------------------------2263 _Laws 1816 —M ap,'indexed'7 Tex"’ r."_V.".. 111111................ ..............opposite 1290 —State Bankers Association, Officers---------------9 —State Bank Officials and Examiners---------------- -------- ---------- 13 (Members shown in Bank List by a 1 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..........................................-............... -.............- - - J 545 —Map (see Map of Africa)____ __________________ opposite 1540 Trinidad—Attorneys............ .......... ................................ ......... ......... —Banks______________________________________________lo97 —Map (see Map of West Indies)__________________ opposite 1594 Trust Powers (Banks having) (Shown in Bank List by T after name of bank) Tunisia—Attorneys_________________________ 1704 _Banks______________________________________________ 1542 —Map (see Map of Africa)_______________________opposite 1540 Turkey in Asia—Banks-------------------------- --------.................. — 1551 Turkey in Europe—Attorneys.........................................................--1711 —Banks----------------------------------------------- --------------......... 1595 U gand a—A ttorneys-----------1704 _Banks_________________________________ ___________ 1542 —Map (see Map of Africa)______________________opposite 1540 Union of Socialistic Soviet Republics—Attorneys—...................... -1710 —Banks__________ -__________________________________ —Map (See map of Europe)----------------------------------------------1538 Union ol South Africa—Attorneys....... .................... ---XiVs _Banks _ ________________________154 6 —Map (see‘Map of’Africa). —II—III.......... ................opposite 1540 United States Map........................-...................-............. „opposite 32 Uruguay—Attorneys................. .................-.........-............................ * ‘ “ _Banks _ __________________________________________ loyy -^Map (see Map of South America)-------------- ----------opposite 1596 Utah—Accessible Banking Points........... ...................---------------- 1933 —Attorneys----------- ------------------ --------.............---------------- J 69 o —Banks.......................-.......................... .................... .................... 1963 —Bank Directors.................................. .................--------- --------- 228s _Laws____________________________________________ . — is 19 —Map indexed “Utah”_________________________ opposite 1362 —State Bankers Association, Officers........................ 9 (Members shown In Bank List by a t after name of bank) —State Bank Officials and Examiners------------------------------- - 13 Value of Foreign Coins.............. 16 Venezuela—Attorneys------------------------------------------------1712 _Banks______________________________________________ _ —Map (see Mao of South America)------------------------ opposite 1596 Vermont—Accessible Banking Points------------199? —Attorneys.....................................................-...........-........... —*691 —Banks.......................................................................... .............—-195? —Bank Directors________________________________ 2285 Vermont—(Continued) PAGE _Laws _____________________1822 —Map. indexed “Val”11111____________ ____ ____ opposite 1368 —State Bankers Association, Officers---------------------------------9 (Members shown in Bank List by + after name of bank) —State Bank Officials and Examiners.............. 13 Victoria—Attorneys. ............. ........................... .........-.................... 1735 —Banks............................................................................................ 1553 Virginia—Accessible Banking Points------------------------------------- 1934 —Attorneys---------------------------- ----------- -.............................. 1691 —Banks..................................................---------------------- -------- ifi? —Bank Directors---- ------ --------------- ----------- ------------------_Laws _ __________________ 1824 —Map indexed “Va”I____ ______________________ opposite 1372 —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......... ................. ......... —Attorneys----------------------- ---------------------------- ------------ } °93 —Banks..................................................... .........—...................... ^02 —Bank Directors........................... 2294 _Laws______________________________________________ _ —Map, indexed “Wash.”________________________ opposite 1402 —State Bankers Association, Officers---------9 (Membors shown in Bank List by 1 after name of bank) —State Bank Officials and Examiners------- ------------------------- 13 Western Australia—Attorneys----------------------------------------------1705 —Banks-------- -----------1°54 West Indies—Attorneys....................................................................... —Banks....... ...............................-.............-......... —........... West Virginia—Accessible Banking Points------------------------------- 1939 —Attorneys................................................................-.................... 1695 —Banks............... 1419 —Bank Directors____________ __________ ____ __________ -2g9» _Laws _ _____________ ___ __ — _ l o zy —M ap ,Tndexed‘“ WI Va7’".II 11111 .............................opposite 1418 —State Bankers Association, Officers----------------------9 (Members shown in Bank List by 1 after. Dame of bank) —State Bank Officials and Examiners................-........................ 13 Windward Island—Attorneys...........................-.............................. -1J12 Banks _ _ __________ __ _ _ ___________ —____—— ^ d < * ( —Map (see Map of West Indies)--------------------------- opposite 1594 Wisconsin—Accessible Banking Points----------------------1942 —Attorneys.:.............................-.............-..................................-1696 —Banks—................... ....... .........................................-...............-1437 —Bank Directors............................................................................ ““Laws ^ ______________________. i Oo i —Map, indexed “Wis.”---------------------------------------opposite 1438 —Map of Milwaukee-------- ----------------------------------opposite 1462 —State Bankers Association, Officers-------------------- ....----9 (Members shown in Bank List by t after name of bank) —State Bank Officials andExaminers............... 14 World (M ap of)........................... -...................-........... ....... opposite 6 Wyoming—Accessible Banking Points................... ......... .............- - -1944 —Attorneys.................................. .......................... ....... ................ J 699 —Banks..................... ................ ..................................... -...........-1479 —Bank Directors-------------------------------------------- -.............. -2314 Laws -__ ___________________ looo —Map,‘indexed"'7 Wyol”!11 III ..................—.............opposite 1480 9 —State Bankers Association, Officers----------------- ------------(Members shown in Bank List by t after name of bank) —State Bank Officials and Examiners............ ............................ 14 Yucatan Attorneys ____________ _________ _ _ _ __ _ i * i * Yugo Slavia (See Kingdom’of SerbsICroats and Slovenes).......... -1588 Yukon—Accessible Banking Points............. -...................... -.........I960 —Attorneys ........ ...................—........................................... -i™4 —Banks____________ ___________ -......... —----- --------------1537 Zanibar Island—Attorneys.................................—-------------------- 1'yg _Banks __________________ -____ _________ -_-_io4o —Map (see Map of Africa)______________________ onposite 1540 To Our Subscribers This the 102nd 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. 2. It is honestly revised twice a year. 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 thousand® of the large corporations and lawyers offices, a circulation three times that of any other similar publication and larger thaD that of any other financial publication in America. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis RAND M9NALLY & COMPANY 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 79,291,085 RESERVE FUND........................46,250,000 DEPOSITS etc- (30th June, 1926) - 1,521,237,300 Over 1850 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 (France) LIMITED BARCLAYS BANK, S. A. I., ROME & GENOA THE BRITISH LINEN BANK THE UNION BANK OF MANCHESTER LIMITED 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 30th, IQ26) EDGAR W. WOOLLEY $5=£ - $199,610,240 63,328,990 63,328,990 - 1,747,304,375 HEAD OFFICE: 5, THREADNEEDLE STREET, LONDON, E.C. 2 OVER 1,900 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 CLYDESDALE BANK LTD. NORTH OF SCOTLAND BANK LTD. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis — .......................... AUSTRALIA and NEW ZEALAND. BANK OF NEW SOUTH WALES (ESTABLISHED 1817.) $5—£/ Paid-up Capital Reserve Fund Reserve Liability of Proprietors $30,000,000.00 22,000,000.00 30,000,000.00 $82,000,000.00 - Aggregate Assets 30th September, 1925 - - $400,047,016.00 OSCAR LINES. General Manager 415 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. London Office: 29, THREADNEEDLE STREET, E. C. 2 Head Office: GEORGE STREET, SYDNEY THE NATIONAL BANK - NEW ZEALAND, LIMITED $5 =£1 Authorised and Subscribed Capital Paid Up Capital _____ Reserve Fund and Undivided Profits - $30,000,000 10,000,000 10,865,220 DIRECTORS HON. WILLIAM PEMBER REEVES. Chairman HENRY F. FRESHWATER. Esq. SIR AUSTIN E. HARRIS, K. B. E. ROBERT LOGAN. Esq. JAMES B. REID. Esq. LINDSAY ERIC SMITH. Esq. SIR JAMES H. B. COATES (Honorary Director) CHIEF OFFICE IN NEW ZEALAND, HEAD OFFICE, 8, MOORGATE, WELLINGTON LONDON, E. C. 2 G. ARTHUR WILLIS, Manager w. McINTOSH, 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 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LLOYDS BANK. LIMITED THE NATIONAL BANK OF SCOTLAND. LTD OFFICE PARTITIONS MADE BY THE MILE Reg. U. S. Pat. Off. SOLD BY THE FOOT (Standard for 33 years) Directors’ Rooms—Interior Woodwork for All Departments of Business Institutions CABINET WORK TO ORDER AS WELL AS STOCK PARTITIONS OOM interiors executed in wood are perfect w settings for directors’ rooms, executives’ pri vate offices, etc. Mount & Robertson's Cabinet Makers are competent to interpret faithfully your architect’s details. Our stock partitions, used to supplement spe cial cabinet work, are suitable for separating departments, and for providing private offices for sub-executives. These stock partitions may be used over and over again whenever different space arrangements become necessary. R We are also originators and pioneer makers of patented Stockboards and Ticker Stands. Prompt installation. Information on request. MOUNT & ROBERTSON, Inc. OFFICE ENGINEERS 62 Broad https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis St. Phone, Hanover 5727 Established 1893 New York https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis OFFICE PARTITIONS MADE BY THE MILE Reg. U. S. Pat. Off. SOLD BY THE FOOT (Standard for 33 years) Directors' Rooms—Interior Woodwork for All Departments of Business Institutions CABINET WORK TO ORDER AS WELL AS STOCK PARTITIONS OOM interiors executed in wood are perfect ^ settings for directors’ rooms, executives' pri vate offices, etc. Mount & Robertson's Cabinet Makers are competent to interpret faithfully your architect's details. Our stock partitions, used to supplement spe cial cabinet work, are suitable for separating departments, and for providing private offices for sub-executives. These stock partitions may be used over and over again whenever different space arrangements become necessary. R I We are also originators and pioneer makers \ of patented Stockboards and Ticker Stands. { Prompt installation. Information on request. MOUNT & ROBERTSON, Inc. OFFICE ENGINEERS 62 Broad https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis St. Phone, Hanover 5727 Established 1893 New York RATES OF POSTAGE DOMESTIC CLASS 1 1 2 3 3 4 2 ARTICLES POSTAGE RATES EXTRA SERVICE PRIVATE MAILING CARDS (written or 2 cents each. (Letters, sealed and unsealed, are 2 cents an ounce or printed)____ _ ___________ .. _____ fraction)__ ________________ Postal Cards______ _________ ____ ____ 2 cents each_____ _ Newspapers and Magazines (transient).......... 2 cents lor each 2 ounces or fraction to 8 ounces inclusive Merchandise and Printed Matter____ _____ IK cents for each 2 ounces or fraction to 8 ounces inclusive Except that---Books, Catalogues (24 pages or more), Seeds, Scions, Bulbs, Roots and Plants are______ 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- “Special Handling” by the mailer.______ ________ 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. Air Mail —10 cents for each half ounce. 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 Weight Local rate 1st pound.. $0.05 Each additional pound, lb.................................. 0.0K Two cents service charge additional on each parcel. Zone 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 In demnity Second Class 15c, No Indemnity. Third Class 15c, Indemnity to $25. Fee for registered mail of any class of no intrinsic valueno indemnity, 15c. 10c, to 2 pounds (inclusive). 15c, over 2 pounds to 10 pounds (inclusive). 20c, over 10 pounds to 50 or 70 pounds (inclusive). Special handling, 25 cents additional. Return Receipts for Regis tered and Insured Mail, 3c (.at sender’s request). C. O. D. FEES INSURANCE FEES Third and Fourth Class Third and Fourth Class 12c, Collects to $10. 5c, to $5. 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 Money Order offices only. 25c, over $50 to $100. Amountof collection and money order fee for return must be entered separately and to taled on the C. 0. D. tag and the parcel. Includes insurance. 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. to 5.00. 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 Cayman Islands Haiti New Zealand (including Tobago! Balearic Islands Colombia Honduras Nicaragua Turks Island Bermudas Cook Island Ireland Paraguay Uruguay Bolivia Costa Rica . Jamaica Peru Wales Barbados Cuba Labrador Republic of Panama Windward Islands (including Gren Brazil Curacao Leeward Islands Salvador ada, St. Vincent, Grenadines, and British Guiana Dominican Republic Mexico Samoa W. St. Lucia) British Honduras Dutch West Indies Scotland Canada Ecuador Spain and Colonies Caicos Island England The rates on other than letters to all foreign countries are: Single postal cards, each, t 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. t , )v’eiRtlt 9,n single-volume books is 6 lbs., 9 oz., except to Cuba, Mexico, Panama and Salvador, where there is no limit. To Argentina, Balearic lllbs B° 1Via’ Brazl ’ Canada, Canary Islands, Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Paraguay, Peru, Spain, Uruguay, the limit of weight is FOREIGN PARCEL POST RATES Fourteen cents per pound or fractions thereof. To inland countries there is an additional transit rate. Parcels may be registered to certain countries. Eleven pounds is the limit to foreign points, 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, Hungary, Iceland, Latvia Lithuania, Luxemburg, Memel, Mexico, Monaco, Netherlands, Nicaragua. Norway, Paraguay, Peru, Poland Roumania, Russia, Saivadore, Sweden Switzerland, Uruguay. Yugoslavia. Fifty pounds to Panama, and Shanghai, China; 15 lbs. to Cuba and Canada. All parcel post shipments to Cuba, Peru, Guatemala, and Chili must be accompanied by an invoice vised at tne 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, Northern Ireland and the Netherlands 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. Not over $2.50_____ 6c Over $2.50 to $5.00 8c Over $5.00 to $10.00.10c https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis RATES FOR EXPRESS MONEY ORDERS Over $10.00 to $20.00...12c Over $20.00 to $40.00...15c Over $40.00 to $60.00...18c 7 Over $60.00 to $ 80.00..,20c Over $80.00 to $100.00...24c BANKERS’ ASSOCIATIONS, 1927 AMERICAN BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, Melvin A. Traylor, president Fiist Trust and Savings Bank, Chicago, Ill. . ,. , First Vice-President, Thomas R. Preston, president Hamdton National Bank, Chattanooga, Tenn. . „ Second Vice-President, Craig B. Hazelwood, vice-president Union Trust 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 8t„ 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, S. C. King, vice-president Bank of Ensley, Ensley. Vice-President, It. H. Cochrane, president City National Bank, Tuscaloosa. Secretary and Treasurer, H. T. Bartlett, vice-president American Trust & Savings Bank, Birmingham. ARIZONA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, A. M. Gillespie, president Nogales National Bank, Nogales. Vice-President, L. A. Van Spanckeren, cashier Mesa National Bank, Mesa. Secretary, Morris Goldwater, Prescott. , Treasurer, P. M. Buckwalter, vice-president Miners & Merchants Bank, Bisbee. ARKANSAS BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, Robt. Neill, vice-president Arkansas National Bank of Hot Springs, Hot Springs National Park. , „ _ Vice-President, H. W. Woolsey, cashier National Bank of Commerce, Paragould. Secretary, Robt. E. Wait, Little Rock. . _ . _ . Treasurer, Art T. Lewis, president First National and First Savings Banks, Fayetteville. CALIFORNIA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, W. E. Wilcox, vice-president and cashier, Anglo and London Paris’ National Bank, San Francisco. m . Vice-President, R. B. Hardacre, vice-president Security Trust & Savings Bank, Los Angeles. ___ _ _ Secretary, Frederick H. Colburn, 628 Mills Bldg., San Francisco. Treasurer, A. If. Muller, vice-president and manager, The San Francisco Bank, San Francisco. CANADIAN BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, C. E. Neill, general manager of The Royal Bank of Canada Montreal. Que. „ _ ,, .... „ Secretary-Treasurer, Henry T. Ross, Canadian Pacific Express Building, Montreal, Que. COLORADO BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, M. H. Crissman, cashier First National Bank, Paonia. Vice-President, R. L. Stitt, cashier Wallace State Bank, Monte Vista. Secretary, L. F. Scarboro, editor and publisher Mountain States Banker, Denver. Treasurer, Beman C. Fox, vice-president Grand Valley National Bank, Grand Junction. CONNECTICUT BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, R. E. Herman, vice-president Mechanics Bank, New Haven. Vice-President, Wm. P. Calder, vice-president Bristol National Bank, Bristol. „ _ _ ,, Secretary, Chas. E. Hoyt, treasurer So. Norwalk Tr. Co., So. Norwalk. Treasurer, H. A. Hoadley, treasurer Salisbury Bank & Trust Co., Lakeville. INDIANA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, R. C. Stephenson, president Saint Joseph Loan and Trust Company, South Bend. Vice-President, Hugo C. Rothert.president Huntingburg Bank, Huntmgburg , Secretary, Forba McDaniel, 310 Odd Fellow Bldg., Indianapolis. Treasurer, J. C. Haskett, cashier Henry County Bank, Spiceland. IOWA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, A. C. Smith, president City National Bank, Clinton. Vice-President, John Sieh, cashier Farmers Trust & Savings Bank, Spencer. Secretary, Frank Warner, 430 Liberty Bldg., Des Moines. Treasurer, F. A. Schuetz, cashier State Savings Bank, Lawler. KANSAS BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, W. M. Price, president Lyon County State Bank, Emporia. Vice-President, A. W. Wilson, president National Bank of Ness City, Ness City. Secretary, W. W. Bowman, Topeka. Assistant Secretary, Fred M. Bowman, Topeka. Office Secretary, Eleanor J. Woodburn, Topeka. Treasurer, I. J. Meade, vice-president Lawrence National Bank, Lawrence KENTUCKY BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, R. E. Turley, cashier State Bank & Trust Co., Richmond. Secretary, Harry G. Smith, 400-1 Louisville National Bank Bldg., Louisville. Treasurer, J. W. Hardaway, cashier Peoples Bank, Shepherdsville. LOUISIANA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, W. P. Connell, President Louisiana National Bank, Baton Rouge. Vice-President, J. C. Barry, president Bank of Lafayette & Trust Co., Lafayette. . Secretary, G. R. Broussard, vice-president Bank of Abbeville, Abbeville. Treasurer, G. F. Provost, vice-president and cashier. Bank of Commerce & Trust Co., Mansfield. MAINE BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, F. L. Palmer, vice-president Fidelity Trust Company, Portland. Vice-President, E. E. Parker, cashier Manufacturers National Bank. Lewiston. Vice-President, H. L. Pishon, treasurer Augusta Trust Co., Augusta. Secretary, E. S. Kennard, vice-president Rumford National Bank, Rumford. Treasurer, G. A. Saflord, secretary-treasurer Hallowell Trust & Banking Co., Hallowed. MARYLAND BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, J. T. C. Hopkins, Jr., president Cecd National Bank, Port Deposit, Secretary, Charles Hann, Merchants National Bank, Baltimore. _ Treasurer, Wm. Marriott, cashier Western National Bank, Baltimore. MASSACHUSETTS BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, Myron F. Converse, treasurer Worcester Five Cents Savings Vice-President, John W. Smead, president First National Bank, Greenfield. Secretary, George W. Hyde, vice-president First National Bank, Boston. Treasurer, J. H. Gilford, vice-president Merchants National Bank, Salem. MICHIGAN BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, Gus Hill, president First National Bank, Port Huron. First Vice-President, E. R. Morton, vice-president and cashier City National Bank, Battle Creek. . . , Second Vice-President. W. L. Dunham, vice-president J irst N ational Bank, Detroit. _ Secretary, Mrs. II. M. Brown, 17X3 Ford Bldg., Detroit. Treasurer, F. E. Van Alstyne, president Wyandotte Savings Bank, Wyan dotte. ^ _ General Counsel, Hal H. Smith, Beaumont, Smith & Harris, Attys., Detroit. MINNESOTA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, R. E. Macgregor, vice-president Northwestern National Bank, Minneapolis. , _ , Vice-President, A. G. Wedge, president First National Bank, Park Rapids. Secretary, F. P. Fellows, 718 National Building, Minneapolis. Asst. Secretary, Vida R. Richards, 718 National Bldg., Minneapolis. Treasurer, A. M. Schaefer, president Peoples State Bank, Jordan. DELAWARE BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, Thomas R. Ingram, cashier Sussex Trust Co.. Lewes, Deb Vice-President, Henry Ridgely, president Farmers Bank, Dover, Del. Secretary and Treasurer, Warren K. Ayres, assistant treasurer Wilmington Trust Company, Wilmington. MISSISSIPPI BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, O. B. Taylor, vice-president Merchants Bank and Trust Co. Vice-President, A. D. Simpson, vice-president First National Bank, Meridian Secretary, George B. Power, Capital National Bank Bldg., Jackson. Treasurer, N. II. Crenshaw, cashier First National Bank, Jackson. DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, Howard Moran, vice-president American Security & Trust Co., Washington. _ „ . First Vice-President, W. W. Spaid, W. B. Hibbs & Co., Washington. Second-Vice President, Robert V. Fleming, president Riggs National Bank, Washington. „ . , . . __ _ , Secretary. Wilmer J. Waller, vice-president Federal-American National Bank, Washington. . . . , _ , Treasurer, A. S. Gatley, vice-president and cashier Lincoln National Bank, MISSOURI BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, W. W. Pollock, president North Missouri Trust Co., Mexico. Vice-President, Edward Buder, vice-president and treasurer Mercantile Trust Co., St. Louis. Secretary, W. F. Keyser, Sedalia. Assistant Secretary, E. P. Neef, Sedalia. Treasurer, E. B. Jacobs, cashier First National Bank, Carthage. AsslstantSecreta'ry, Miss Grace M. Bromley, 1318 F St. N. W„ Washington. Counsel, Frank J. Hogan, Washington. MONTANA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, J. K. Haslet, cashier W. A. Clark & Brother. Bkrs., Butte. Vice-President, E. H. Westbrook, president Midland National Bank, Billings. Secretary-Treasurer, John Romersa, Kalispell. FLORIDA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, J. H. Tlierrell, president Commercial Bank & Trust Co.. Ocala. Vice-President, J. S. Reese, president Citizens & Peoples National Bank, Pensacola. „ . .. ^ .. ,T , Secretary and Treasurer, W. O. Boozer, vice-president Atlantic National Batik, Jacksonville. NEBRASKA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION Prasident, C. G. Bliss, president City UclIlK, Bank, rjlLllUcrK. Elnicreek. The Nebraska Chairman Executive Council, A. R. Thompson, president. presic National Bank, Hastings. _ „ Secretary, William B. Hughes, 908 W. O. W. Bldg., Omaha. Treasurer, Jas. B. Owen, vice-president Stockyards National Bank, Omaha. General Counsel, J. P. Palmer, 306 Peters Trust Bldg., Omaha. GEORGIA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President Abial Winn, vice-president First National Bank, Valdosta. Vice-President, Robt. Strickland, Jr., vice-president Fourth National Bank, NEVADA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION Secretary, Haynes McFadden, Suite 707-101 Marietta St., Atlanta. Asst. Secretary, Jos. R. Murphy, Suite 707-101 Marietta St., Atlanta. Treasurer. E. L. Henderson, cashier Commercial Bank, Cedartown. General Counsel, Orville A. Park, Macon. President, C. W. Mapes, president Washoe County Bank. Reno. Vice-President. F. O. Stickney, president Mason Valley Bank, Yermgton. Secretary, L. S. Reese, assistant cashier Farmers and Merchants National Bank, Reno. „ , „ , , Treasurer, George F. Willis, cashier Lyon County Bank, Yermgton. COUNTRY BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION OF GEORGIA President, C. E. Martin, vice-president Citizens Bank, Fort Valley. First Vice-President, M. L. Lee, cashier Moultrie Banking Co., Moultrie. Second Vice-President. R. I.. McClain, vice-president Pickens County Bank, Secretary^and Treasurer, L. R. Adams, 415 Rhodes Building, Atlanta. General Counsel, Alex. W. Smith, Jr., Atlanta. NEW HAMPSHIRE BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, E. K. Woodworth, president New Hampshire Savings Bank, Concord. , . Secretary, Harry L. Additon, vice-president and cashier Merchants National Bank, Manchester. _ , „ m Treasurer, F. W. Page, treasurer Whitefleld Savings Bank & Trust Co., Whitefleld. IDAHO BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, A. V. Chamberlin, vice-president American Trust Co., Coeur NEW JERSEY BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President. Walter E. Robb, president Burlington City Loan and Trust Co., Burlington. _ . , _ „ , Vice-President, F. Morse Archer, president First National State Bank, Camden. . _ „ „ Secretary, Wm. J. Field, president Commercial Trust Company of New Jersey Jersey City. Treasurer, William J. Couse, president Asbury Park Trust Co., Asbury Park. Vice-President, Walter F. Hansen, assistant cashier First National Bank of Ida, Boise. Secretary, J. S. St. Clair, vice-president Boise City National Bank, Boise. Treasurer, L. C. Collins, cashier First National Bank, Blackfoot. ILLINOIS BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, W. B. Crawford, vice-president West Frankfort Bank & Trust Co., West Frankfort. , _. ,, Vice-President, J. M. Appel, president Highland Park State Bank, Highland Park, First National Bank, Wilmette, and Broadway National Bank, Chicago. . . . Secretary, M. A. Graettinger, Illinois Bankers Association, Chicago. Treasurer, W. H. Drewel, president National Trust Bank, Charleston. Assistant Secretary, Olive S. Jennings, Illinois Bankers Association, Chicago https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 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. 8 BANKERS’ ASSOCIATIONS, 1927—Continued NEW YORK STATE BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, Carleton A. Chase, president First Trust and Deposit Co. Syracuse. Vice President, G. W. McGarrah, chairman of the executive committee, Chase National Bank, New York. Secretary, Edward J. Gallien, 128 Broadway, New York. Treasurer, Wm. T. McCaffrey, president National Bank of Rochester, Rochester. SAVINGS BANKS ASSOCIATION OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK President. George D. Sears, secretary Buffalo Savings Bank, Buffalo. \ ice-President, Benjamin L. Webb, president Cortland Savings Bank, Cortland. Vice-President, Chas. H. Coonrad, Jr., treasurer Cohoes Savings Bank, Cohoes. Vice-President, Lewis B. Gawtry, president Bank for Savings, New York City. Vice-President, Wendell J. Curtis, secretary Mechanics Savings Bank, Rochester. Vice-President, Charles Froeb, president Lincoln Savings Bank. Brooklyn. General Secretary, Paul W. Albright, 110 E. 42d St., New York City. Treasurer. William M. Campbell, president American Savings Bank, New York City. Counsel, Hon. Russell Wiggins, Middletown. NORTH CAROLINA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, Frank F. Fagan, president National Bank. Rocky Mount. v ice-Presioent, E. E. Jones, cashier Independence Trust Co., Charlotte. Vice-President, W. G. Gaither, vice-president First & Citizens National Bank, Elizabeth City. Vice-President, John W. Simpson, vice-president and cashier Atlantic Bank & Trust Co., Greensboro. Secretary, Paul P. Brown, Raleigh. Treasurer, H. G. Kramer, vice-president and cashier Savings Bank and Trust Co., Elizabeth City. General Counsel, Willis Smith, Raleigh. NORTH DAKOTA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, H. T. Graves, president James River National Bank, Jamestown. Vice-President and Chairman Executive Committee, G. H. Leiek, cashier hirst National Bank, Hebron. Secretary, W. C. Macfadden, 54 Broadway, Fargo. Treasurer, J. E. Davis, president Citizens State Bank, Goodrich. OHIO BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, Wm. A. Ackerman, vice-president. The Knox National Bank, Mt. Vernon. Vice-President, Robert McEvilley, vice-president First National Bank, Cincinnati. Secretary, Chas. H. Mylander, Huntington Bank Bldg., Columbus. Acting Treasurer, H. M. Davies, vice-president and cashier The Com mercial Bank, Delphos. OKLAHOMA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, E. D. Kilpatrick, cashier First State Bank, Le Flore. Vice-President, G. S. Weitzenhoffer, vice-president Security National Bank, Oklahoma City. Secretary, Eugene P. Gum, 907 Colcord Bldg., Oklahoma City. Assistant Secretary, Gertrude Corbitt, Oklahoma City Treasurer O E. Thompson, president McCurtain County Bank, Broken Bow, Okla. Chm. executive committee, L. K. Meek, president Security State Bank Ponca City. OREGON BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, J. E. Montgomery, president Bank of Southwestern Oregon Marshfield. Vice-President, Keith Powell, president First National Bank and Bank of Woodburn, Woodburn. Treasurer, J. F. Hutchinson, cashier First National Bank, Union Ore Secretary, Andrew Miller, 310 Lumbermens Bldg., Portland. PENNSYLVANIA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, Clark Hammond, vice-president Keystone National Bank Pittsburgh. Vice-President, Harry J. Haas, vice-president First National Bank, Phila delphia. Secretary, C. F. Zimmerman, president First National Bank, Huntingdon Treasurer, A1 K. Thomas, president East End Trust Co., Harrisburg. RHODE ISLAND BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, John H. Wells,vice-president R. I. Hospital Trust Co.. Providence Vice-President, Everett W. Whitford, president Centreville National Bank West Warwick. Secretary, Edward A. Havens, vice-president Mechanics National Bank Providence. Treasurer, Clyde A. Rines, assistant secretary. Industrial Trust Co Providence. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis SOUTH CAROLINA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, G. W. Duvall, president The Bank of Cheraw, Cheraw, S. C. Vice-President, James E. Peurifoy, president First National Bank, Waiterboro. Secretary and Treasurer, Henry S. Johnson, Columbia. Attorney, B. H. Moss, President Edisto National Bank, Orangeburg. SOUTH DAKOTA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, Einer Johnson, cashier Volin State Bank, Volin, S. Dak. Vice-President, Harry M. Griffith, president Potter County Bank, Gettys burg. Secretary, George A. Starring, Knights of Pythias Building, Huron, S. Dak. Treasurer, Geo. C. Fullitiweider, president National Bank of Huron, Huron, S. Dak. TENNESSEE BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, T. A. Embrey, president Farmers National Bank, Winchester. Vice-President, E. F. Ames, vice-president and cashier First National Bank, Maryville. Vice-President, Algood Carlen, assistant cashier Citizens Bank, Cookeville. V ice-President, Caldwell Harrison, cashier Farmers-Peoples Bank, Milan. Secretary. H. G. Huddleston. 1012 American Trust Bldg., Nashville. Treasurer, W. H. Wall, cashier First Trust & Savings Bank, Clarksville. TEXAS BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, Chas. A. Fisk, vice-president Amarillo Bank & Trust Co., Amarillo. Secretary, W. A. Philpott, Jr., Dallas. Treasurer, Roy K. Mims, president First State Bank & Trust Co.. Laredo. UTAH BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, Jas. M. Peterson, president James M. Peterson Bank, Richfield. First Vice-President, E. A. Culbertson, vice-president Continental National Bank. Salt Lake City. Second Vice-President, J. E. Halverson, president State Security Bank, Brigham City. Secretary and Treasurer, Carl R. Marcusen, cashier Price Commercial & Savings Bank, Price. VERMONT BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, Chas. M. Smith, president Marble Savings Bank, Rutland. Vice-President, W. C. Johnson, Jr., cashier Peoples National Bank, Barre. Secretary, C. S. Webster, treasurer Barton Savings Bank & Trust Co., Barton. Treasurer, L. A. Neal, cashier Bradford National Bank. Bradford. VIRGINIA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, M. G. Field, president National Bank of Orange, Orange. Vice-President, J. M. Lewis, president Bank of Gloucester, Gloucester. Secretary, W. S. Irby, executive vice-president Bank of Lunenburg, Kenbridge. Assistant Secretary, Harry Frazier, Jr., member of Firm Frederick E. Nolting & Co., Richmond. Treasurer, C. W. Berrbower, assistant cashier, First National Exchange Bank, Roanoke. WASHINGTON BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, Guy C. Browne, president Columbia ValleyBank, Wenatchee. Arice-President, J. W. Spangler, president Seattle National Bank. Seattle. General Council. Wm. Hatch Davis, 1016 Old National Bank, Spokane. Secretary, J. W. Brislawn, Alaska Bldg., Seattle. Treasurer, F. C. Forrest, cashier First National Bank, Pullman. WEST VIRGINIA BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, M. A. Fletcher, treasurer Fairmont Trust Co., Fairmont. Vice-President, C. M. Gohen, president First Huntington National Bank, Huntington. Secretary, Joseph S. Hill, vice-president and cashier Capital City Bank, Charleston. Treasurer, L. W. Boley, cashier Oak Hill National Bank, Oak Hill. WISCONSIN BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, Knute Anderson, cashier Union National Bank, Eau Claire. Vice-President, N. T. Gill, cashier State Bank of Reedsburg, Reedsburg. Secretary, Wall G. Coapman, 717 Caswell Block, Milwaukee. Assistant Secretary, Lloyd E. Hull, 717 Caswell Block, Milwaukee. Treasurer, R. K. Henry, assistant cashier Jefferson County Bank, Jefferson. WYOMING BANKERS’ ASSOCIATION President, Wm. C. Henderson, cashier First National Bank, Sheridan. Vice-President, R. C. Carther, vice-president Wyoming Trust Co., Casper. Secretary, Harry B. Henderson, Cheyenne. Treasurer, George A. Hinman, cashier First National Bank, Greybull. ADDITIONAL BANKERS’ ASSOCIATIONS INVESTMENT BANKERS ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA Office of the Secretary, 105 South La Salle Street, Chicago OFFICERS AND BOARD OF GOVERNORS 1927 PRESIDENT PLINY JEWELL............................ Coffin & Burr, Inc..........................................................................................................................................................................Boston VICE-PRESIDENTS JOEL E. FERRIS...........................Ferris & Hardgrove........................................................................... ....................................................................................... Spokane ARTHUR H. GILBERT..............Spencer Trask & Co.................................................................................................................................................................... Chicago HENRY R. HAYES.................... Stone & Webster. Inc............................................................................................................................................................ New York ROBERT H. MOULTON............R. H. Moulton & Co................................................................................................................................................................... Los Angeles B. A. TOMPKINS........................... Bankers Trust Co......................................................................................................................................................................... New York EXECUTIVE SECRETARY ALDEN H. LITTLE................... 105 S. La Salle Street.................................................................................................................................................................. Chicago ASSISTANT SECRETARY CLAYTON G. SCHRAY............105 S La Salle Street.................................................................................................................................................................. Chicago TREASURER FRANK M. GORDON...............First Trust & Savings Bank..................................................................................................................................................... Chicago GOVERNORS ROY MORRIS................................ Brown Brothers & Co.................................................................... GEORGE WHITNEY.................... J. P. Morgan & Co.......................................................................... JOSEPH R. SWAN..........................Guaranty Company of New York.......................................... CLARKSON POTTER.................. Hayden. Stone & Co....................................................................... GEORGE B. CALDWELL......... 8 E. 41 St. N. Y................................................................................. JEROME J. HANOVER............. Kuhn. Loeb & Co.............................................................................. WALTER S. BREWSTER..........Russell, Brewster* Co.................................................................. WILLIAM J. WARDALL...........Bonbright & Co.................................................................................. HENRY C. OLCOTT.................... Continental and Commercial Trust & Savings Bank . CARROLL J. WADDELL...........Drexel & Co......................................................................................... CHARLES D. DICKEY..............Brown Brothers & Co.................................................................... FRANK D. NICOL......................... Nicol, Ford & Co., Inc.................................................................. .New York .New York . New York . New York . New York . New York Chicago Chicago .Chicago .Philadelphia Philadelphia . Detroit SIDNEY R. SMALL......................Harris, Small & Co...................................... R. A. WILBUR..................................The Herrick Co............................................. KELTON E. WHITE................... G. H. Walker & Co..................................... HENRY T. FERRISS...................First National Co.......................................... MAX O. WHITING....................... Harris, Forbes & Co., Inc........................ JOHN P. BAER................................John P. Baer & Co...................................... SIMON J. BLOCK......................... Nelson, Cook & Co...................................... ROBERT R. GORDON...............Gordon & Co................................................... JOHN E. JARDINE.......................Wm. R. Staats Co., Inc............................. CHARLES R. BLYTH..................Blyth, Witter & Co..................................... BENJAMIN H. DIBBLEE.........E. H. Rollins & Sons................................. HUGH W. GROVE.........................First Wisconsin Co...................................... EDGAR FRIEDLANDER.......... Edgar Friedlander....................................... J. H. GUNDY.................................... Wood, Gundy & Co.................................... JOHN DANE...................................... Marine Bk. & Tr. Co................................ J. L. SEYBOLD...............................Wells-Dickey Co.......................................... SIGMUND STERN.........................Stern Brothers & Co................................... WILLIS K. CLARK....................... Geo. H. Burr, Conrad & Broom, Inc. CHARLES T. SIDLO.................... Sidlo, Simons. Day & Co......................... GEORGE V. ROTAN....................Newhaus & Co............................... Detroit Cleveland St. Louis St. Louis . Boston . Baltimore . Baltimore . Pittsburgh . Los Angeles . San Francisco . San Francisco .Milwaukee . Cincinnati . Toronto New Orleans .Minneapolis . Kansas City .Portland, Ore. . Denver . Houston EDUCATIONAL DIRECTOR COMMITTEE COUNSEL Samuel O. Rice, 105 South La Salle Street, Chicago. Paul V. Keyser, Denrike Building, Washington. FIELD SECRETARY DIRECTOR OF PUBLICITY Arthur G. Davis, 105 South La Salle Street, Chicago. Harry Rascovar, 14 Stone Street, New York. OFFICE COUNSEL OFFICIAL REPORTER Theodore S. Chapman, 111 West Monroe Street, Chicago. Frederick H. Gurtler, 69 West Washington Street, Chicago. MORTGAGE BANKERS ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA Offices of Secretary, 112 W, Adams St., Chicago Walter B. Kester, Secretary OFFICERS President. E D. Schumacher, Southern Bond & Mortgage Co., Richmond, Va. Vice-President, C. C. Bennett, Western Securities Investment Co., Denver, Colo. Vice-President, Wm. H. McNeal, N. Y. Title & Mortgage Co., New York, N. Y. Vice-President, J. B. Sleeper, Pioneer Mortgage Co.. Topeka, Kansas. Vice-President, Levering Moore, National Mortgage Co. of California, San Francisco. BOARD OF GOVERNORS A. Siihring. Dime Savings & Trust Co., Peoria, Ill. C. B. Merriam, Central Trust Co , Topeka, Kans. J. S. Hill, Capital City Bank, Charleston, W. Va. E. R. Tennant, Dallas Trust and Savings Bank, Dallas, Texas. E. E. Murrey, American Trust Co., Nashville, Tenn. R. R. Rogers. Vermont Loan & Trust Co., Spokane, Wash. Thomas F. Clark, Thomas F. Clark Co., New Haven, Conn. Geo. F. Heindel, Phoenix Company of Ottumwa. Ottumwa, Iowa Geo. H. Taylor. Geo. H. Taylor Rea! Estate Mortgage Co., Chicago, III. E. B. Mount, E. B. Mount & Co., Minneapolis, Minn. A. A. Zinn, Commerce Trust Co., Kansas City, Mo. A. Y. Creager, A. Y. Creager Co., Sherman, Texas. R. S. Beachy, Peoples Trust Co., Kansas City, Mo. F. W. Koneman, Citizens Investment Co., Sioux Falls, S. Dak. F. C. Waples, Midland Mortgage Co., Cedar Rapids, Iowa. FINANCIAL ADVERTISERS’ ASSOCIATION CENTRAL OFFICE. Suite 1752. 231 So. La Salle Street. Chicago. Executive Secretary, PRESTON E. REED DIRECTORS OFFICERS President— C. H. HANDERSON, Union Trust Company, First Vice-President— H. G. HODAPP, The National City Bank. New Second Vice-President— KLINE L. ROBERTS, Citizens Trust & Savings Third Vice-President— C. H. WETTERAU, American National Bank, , Cleveland, Ohio H. .T. BERNARD, Second National Bank, Houston, Texas. C. E. BOURNE, The Royal Bank of Canada, Montreal. W E. BROCKMAN, Minnesota Loan & Trust Co., Minneapolis. A. E. BRYSON, Halsey, Stuart & Company, Chicago. FRANK FUCHS, First National Bank, St. Louis. F. W. GEHLE, Chase National Bank, New York City. CARL A. GODE, Illinois Merchants Trust Co., Chicago. DALE GRAHAM, Mississippi Valley Trust Co., St. Louis. ROBERT J. IZANT, Central National Bank, Cleveland. H. ENNIS JONES, Franklin Trust Co., Philadelphia. F. R. KERMAN, Bank of Italy, San Francisco. THOMAS J. KIPHART, Fifth-Third National Bank, Cincinnati. A. DOUGLAS OLIVER, Provident Trust Co. of Philadelphia. CARROLL RAGAN, United States Mortgage & Trust Co., New York MARJORIE E. SCHOEFFEL, Plainfield Trust Co., Plainfield, N. J. FRED M. STAKER, Commerce Trust Co., Kansas City York. Bank, Columbus. Ohio. Nashville, Tenn. T it.' Y RHINTZ, Peoples Trust & Savings Bank, Chicago. REPRESENTATIVES, NATIONAL COMMISSION INTERNATIONAL ADVERTISING ASSOCIATION GUY W. COOKE, First National Bank, Chicago. E. H. KITTREDGE, Hornblower & Weeks, Boston. CLINTON F. BERRY, Union Trust Co., Detroit. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 10 HOME SAVINGS BANKS of EVERY DESCRIPTION Made by JOHN NUTRY 85-87 Adams Street BROOKLYN, N. Y. WORLD WIDE DISTRIBUTOR Inventor and Manufacturer FOR THE PAST TWENTY-FIVE YEARS BOOK BANKS Large and small sized single side-opening; double opening; end opening; vest pocket side-opening; gift book; all beauti fully and artistically embossed. Also clock banks with embossed covering; polished nickel registering banks; oxydized copper and polished nickel metal boxes and OUR NEW CHANGE COIN BANK Everybody wants and needs one of these Our Service Securing New Savings Accounts cannot be equalled Before Buying Send for Our Free Samples. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Satisfactory Banks and Prices Guaranteed. NUMERICAL SYSTEM BANK TRANSIT MAP. 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 JPa. 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 Kapids, la. 48 'Waco, Tex. 49 Muskogee. Okla. LIBRARY PASTE Sticks Quickest Is the Most Reliable Keeps Clean Never Spoils -i 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 8S Texas 89............................ 90 California 91 Arizona 92 Idaho 93 Montana 94 Nevada 95 New Mexico 96 Oregon 97 Utah 98 Washington ©9 Wyoming https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis ft to > c« ^ l|S5 0 I D CO RAND MCNALLY & CO. NUMERICAL SYSTEM BANK TRANSIT MAP Copyright by Rand MCNally & Co. A. S. PRATT & SONS WASHINGTON, D. C. Trust Department — Accounting Systems See Back of Washington, D. C. Map 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 1926 FEB. JAN. 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 29 S 26 65 W 5 Th 26 W 24 W 30 Th 9 65 73 54 77 73 72 74 62 M 29 76 F 6 81 F 14 73 F 5 70 W 28 82 Th 18 58 F 4 59 T 20 77 T 4 70 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 M 12 102 T 6 84 T 5 74 68 69 68 77 T 25 T 17 Th 10 Th 9 M 12 61 92 89 F 25 88 T 4 78 71 69 65 76 69 T 3 103 Th 22 94 M 20 59 Th 14 90 T 29 57 T 7 59 M 31 76 S 7 58 S 28 79 M 18 73 67 F 22 55 75 T 3 83 T 2 76 T 20 Th 7 W 5 M 30 M 15 W 9 T 6 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 W 30 79 F 27 65 T 16 76 Th 10 70 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 62 NOV. F 25 78 F 30 80 M 15 82 W 16 77 78 OCT. Th 7 W 5 65 Th 4 96 M 30 80 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 F 30 86 F 29 64 60 M 28 66 T 14 62 66 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 66 S 12 74 Th 2 71 T 12 74 T 11 83 T 5 95 T 26 83 T 21 73 S 31 49 W 10 F 17 T 20 F 1 M 17 M .5 S 31 63 F 12 W 8 T 6 F 15 F 14 74 70 68 77 76 F 10 102 M 28 90 69 66 70 62 66 68 Th 31 61 F 31 51 W 27 40 M 31 41 T 31 60 W 31 44 W 29 44 S 31 116 F 29 105 M 31 108 W 31 82 Th 31 94 F 31 184 Dales 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 32 48 36 30 42 1G ( First Figures In Square denote day of montb 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 First National Bank, San Francisco, Calif. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 10 5 3 16 11 7 9 1 9 7 4 10 6 9 6 2 6 5 3 5 2 3 4 1 4 5 2 10 7 18 14 204 on Monday “ Tuesday “ Wednesday “ Thursday “ Friday “ Saturday Total, 204 ♦Sis calls made. KEY CALLS STATE BANK OFFICIALS AND EXAMINERS, 1927 State Name Address Ala............... A. E. Jackson, Slipfc. 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 Troy. George B. Jackson, Bank Examiner..................Montgomery. M. A. O’Dom, Bank Examiner........................ Selma. Leon P. Cartwright, Bank Examiner............. Montgomery. A. B. McWilliams, Bank Examiner............... Athens. A. P. Imahorn, Bank Examiner........................Montgomery. .A. T. Hammons, Supt. of Banks..................... Phoenix. J. B. Button, Chief Bank Examiner.............. Phoenix. Clarence Cox, Deputy Bank Examiner. . . .Phoenix. Minnie Seaman, Acct.-Stenographer..............Phoenix. S. B. Smith, Special Bank Examiner.............Phoenix. .Walter E. Taylor, Bank Commissioner. . . .Little Rock. R. G. Dickinson, Asst. Bk. Commissioner .Little Rock. Oliver Phillips, Asst. Commissioner in charge of Building & Loan Associations . . Little Rock. Guy G. May, Bank Examiner...........................Little Rock. J. W. .Tarrett, Bank Examiner.......................... Little Rock. Seth Hastings, Bank Examiner.........................Little Rock. Theo. P. Carson, Bank Examiner................... Little Rock. E. B. Futrall, Asst. Bank Examiner.............. Little Rock. Calif............ W'ill C. Wood, Supt. of Banks........................... 7th Floor, Security Bldg., 343 Sansome St.. San Francisco. Colo.............Grant McFerson, Bank Commissioner.......... Denver. Axel B. Olson, ( hief Deputy Bank Com .... Denver. John Jepson, Deputy Bank Com.....................Denver. WTalter J. Nelson, Deputy Bank Com. Office, 125 State Office Bldg...........................Denver. “ L. C. Rodgers, Deputy Bank Com...................Denvei. Conn........... John B. Byrne, Commissioner.................... Putnam Lester E. Shippee, Deputy Com...................... East Killingly Win. P. Landon, Mer. Bond Dept..................Hartford. Wm. N. Scott, Chief Examiner........................Hartford Sherwooa B. Potter, Bank Examiner............Berlin. A. F. Austin, Bank Examiner...........................Torrington Frank I. Irving Bank Examiner.....................Bridgeport.’ George Austin, Bank Examiner.......................Hartford. Edward B. Barlow, Bank Examiner..............Hartford! Harold P. Splain, Bank Examiner..................New Haven. Ray L. Makin, Bank Examiner...................... Hartford Philip Moriarity. Bank Examiner.................. Hartford. R. Gordon Baldwin, Bank Examiner............ Bristol. Ralph II. McKinnel, Bank Examiner...........East Haven. John F. DiNonno. Bank Examiner.........; . .New Britain Stanley F. Gierymski, Bank Examiner .. . .New Britain. George H. Hotchkiss, Bank Examiner......... Hartford. “ Webster D. Copp, Bank Examiner.................Norwich. Dnla.............Harold W. Horsey, State Bank Com..............Dover. Ira. Lewis, Deputy Bank Com...........................Bridgeville. “ Paul D. Lovett, Examiner.................................. Newark Fla................ Ernest Amos, Comptroller................................ Tallahassee W. M. McIntosh, Jr., General Chief Clerk. . Tallahassee! R. A. Gray, Asst, to the Comptroller........... Tallahassee. F. C. C ole. Banking Clerk..................................Tallahassee. J. E. Perkins. Bank Examiner..........................Tallahassee. E. M. Porter, Chief Bank FIxaminer.............Tallahassee. T. C. Hawkins, Bank Examiner...................... Miami. G. C. White, Bank Examiner........................... Starke A. W. Saarinen, Bank Examiner.....................Tallahassee. R. F. Rogers Jr., Bank Examiner..................Dunnellon. Sherman Drawdy, Bank Examiner................ Leesbury. E. P. Jarkson, Bank Examiner........................ Tallahassee Ga.................A. B. Mobley, Supt. of Banks...........................Atlanta. J. E. Cagle, Asst. Supt. of Banks................... Atlanta. R. B. Gunby, Bank Examiner..........................Columous. E. B. Douglass, Bank Examiner..................... Talbotton! W. D. Lloyd, Bank Examiner.......................... Tallapoosa. M. E. Sisk, Bank Examiner.............................. Greensboro. N. R. Henderson, Bank Examiner................. Douvlasville. O. G. Jackson, Bank Examiner........................College Park W. J. Davis, General Agent...............................Portal H. B. Pitt, Bank Examiner................................T.incolnton. C. L. Gruver, Bank Examiner..........................Summit. Idaho......... E. W. Porter, Commissioner of Finance .. .Boise. C. I. Canfield, Chief Examiner, Blue-sky .Boise. W. H. Florae, Chief Bank FIxaminer.............Boise. J. P. Macnamara, Examiner..............................Boise. E. Scott, Gen’l Liquidating Agent..................Boise! J. R. Middleton, Examiner................................ Boise Illinois. . . .Oscar Nelson, Auditor. Main Office, Capitol Bldg........................................................................... Springfield. Chicago Office: 1331. 33 S. Clark St. lief Bank Examiner. L*t Chief Bank Exam . w . .ss’t to the Chief Ba__ Examiner................................................................Springfield. F. E. Edgerton, Chief Examiner..................... Chicago. Chas. Curren. Jr., Bank 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 FIxaminer................. Chicago. Arthur M. Tarman, Bank Examiner.............Chicago. F. A. Adams, Bank Examiner.......................... Springfield. F. A. Bach, Bank Examiner............................. Chicago. M. S. Barber, Bank Examiner.......................... Springfield. Frank Chew, Bank Examiner............................Springfielo. Glen C. Hodges, Bank Examiner....................Springfield. O. A. James, Bank Examiner............................Springfield. J. B. Lennon, Bank Examiner......................... Springfield. J. L. Northrop, Bank Examiner..................... Springfield. E. R. Petiie, Bank Examiner........................... Springfield J. E. Shearer. Bank FIxaminer......................... Springfield W. C. Shy, Bank Examiner............................... Springfield W. E. Turnet, Trust Examiner........................Springfield. J. W. McClellan, Trust Examiner..................Springfield. .Luther F. Symons, Bank Commissioner, Room 241 State House..................................Indianapolis. Thos. D. Barr, Deputy Commissioner.......... Indianapolis. C. M. Lawrence, Bank Examiner................... Princeton. John C. Sanders, Bank Examiner.................. Delphi. Morris E. Stult.z, 5ank Examiner................... Portland. J. W. Parrelt. Bank Examiner......................... Indianapolis. J. N. West, Bank Examiner.............................. Greenwood. Harold Cox, Bank Examiner............................ Algos. Kenneth V. Brownell, Bank Examiner........ Brazil. Raymond F. Huber, Bank Examiner........... Gary. S. J. Bovard, Bank Examiner...........................Madison. Iowa........... L. A. Andrew, Sup,, of Banking....................... State House, , _ T Des Moines. C. C. Jacobsen. Deputy Supt............................ Des Moines. C. W. Enyart, Examiner in charge of closed . „ bank............................................................................ Des Moines. .. Carl Trout, Examiner.............................................Maxwell. H. C. Lynn, Bank Examiner.............................Ottumwa. F. W. Bloxham, Bank Examiner.....................Mason City. F. W. Walsmith, Bank Examiner................... Ottumwa. A. E. Rugg, Bank Examiner..............................Des Moines. V. J. Wilson, Bank Examiner............................ Waterloo. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 11 State Name Address Iowa...........L. H. .Turgemeyer, Bank Examiner.................Sheldon. (cont.) H. B. Dresler, Bank Examiner......................... Des Moines. V. L. Bartling, Bank Examiner........................Waterloo. A. J. Mulroney, Bank Examiner..................... Mallard. J. H. Peterman, Bank Examiner..................... Indianola. B. H. Wood, Bank Examiner............................ Perry. C. O. F’igge, Bank Examiner..............................Ossian. R. S. Beatty, Bank Examiner...........................Storm Lake. L. D. Beckett, Bank Examiner........................ Nortliwood. H. R. Jackson, Junior Examiner....................... Des Moines. Walter Light, Junior Examiner......................West Liberty. “ W. E. Julius, Junior Examiner........................Avoca. Kansas . . .Roy I.. Bone, Bank Commissioner................ Topeka. P. V. Miller, Chief Examiner............................Highland. W. S. Kennedy. Asst. Bank Com....................Topeka. C. B. White, Spec. Asst. Blue-sky Dept. . .Topeka. J. W. Johnson, Supervisoi Bldg. & Loan Department.......................................................... Topeka. W. F. Thompson, Asst. Supt. Bldg. & Loan Dept.......................................................................... Topeka. Anna E. Speck, Deputy Bank Com............... Topeka. C. F. Gilpin, Bank Examiner........................... Topeka. R. F. O’Brien, Bank Examiner........................ Salina. H. 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. D. W. Woolley, Bank Examiner..................... Hutchinson. Ii. O. Bishop, Bank Examiner......................... 606 Buchanan, Topsks, W. H. Breihan, Bank Examiner.......................Topeka. War. O. Brooks, Bank Examiner.................... Hutchinson. N. R. Oberwortmann, 1st Spec. Ass’t.............Chetopa. T. J. Rhodes, Bank Examiner..........................Frankfort. I. L. Perkins, Bank Examiner.......................... Box 531, Salina. L. FJ. Mauck, Bank Examiner..........................Lyons. W. L. Bunten, Bank Examiner........................Topeka. H. B. Eagle, Bank Examiner............................Williamsburg. C. H. Sutton, Bank Examiner......................... Kansas City. Ivy...............C. E. Marvin, Banking Com............................... Midway. S. A. Phillips, Deputy Bank Co.......................Corbin. H. H. Shanks, Bank Examiner........................ Stanford Shelby Martin, Bank Flxaminer..................... Clay City. Floyd B. Clark, Bank Examiner..................... Glasgow. J. Bryan Smith, Building & Loan Exam. . . Hinman. W. L. Coons, Bank Examiner.......................... Lexington. “ C. M. Dunn, Bank Examiner.............................Smithland. La................. J. S. Brock, State Bank Com., 300 New Court Bldg..............................................................New Orleans. O. H. Pittman, Chief Bank Examiner..........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.............Augusta T. Frank Parker, Senior Examiner................ Belfast Ernest C. Stinson, Bank Examiner................ Bangor. Woodbury Wallace, Bank Examiner............. Augusta. Harold F. Dana, Bank Examiner................... Auburn. Le Roy Rollins, Assistant Examiner............. Lewiston. George H. Young, Assistant Examiner .. . .Portland. Harry E. Henderson, Securities Examiner .Augusta. Annie R. Norman, Clerk..................................... Augusta. ‘‘ F\ Bernice Standish, Asst. Clerk......................Gardiner. Md...............Geo. W. Page, Bank Com., 409 Union Trust Building, Cor. Charles and Fayette Sts.. Baltimore. John D. Hospelhorn, Deputy Bank Com., „ Bnlorn Trust Bldg................................................. Baltimore. Wm. J. Gerbig, Senior Examiner, Union ,, !CrU5»®'d,g............................................................... Baltimore. S. W. Mitzel, Senior Examiner, Union Trust ,, _ Bldg.. ...................................................................... Baltimore. J. M. Harvey, Senior Examiner, Union Trust Bldg.............................................................. Baltimore. J. H. Sherman, Senior Examiner, Union „ . Trust Bldg................................................................Baltimore. A. C. Mernan, Jr., Senior Examiner, Union .. tt T^usAB1.d?- v • :..................................................Baltimore. H Fj. Meeks, Junior Examiner, Union Trust Tr Bldg. .. .............................................................. Baltimore. V. C. Harrison, Junior Examiner, Union „ ™Tr*JstBldg..............................................................Baltimore. W. E. Lutman, Junior Examiner, Union .r „ Trust Bldg..............................................................Baltimore. Mass............Roy A. Hovey, Com. of Banks......................... 112 State House,. .< itt Boston. Wm. J. Fowlei, Deputy Com. of Banks . . .Beverly. Arthur Guy, Director of Div. of Savings ,, Banks..................................................................... Framingham. Elwood A. Wyman, Asst. Director of Div. of Savings Banks................................................Whitman. Chas. H. Answorth, Director of Div. of Tr. Companies............................................................. Beverly. 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. C/has. J. Bateman, Jr., Bank Examiner......... Newtonville. Walter S. Bosworth, Bank Examiner............ Malden. Eugene Brimmer. Bank Examiner................. Malden. F’orest F. Bursley, Bank Examiner................ Somerville. Howard A. Clark, Bank Examiner.................AVakefield. Chas. A. Crowell, Bank Examiner................. Salem. George F. Davee, Bank Examiner................. Plymouth. William E. Day, Bank Examiner....................Chelsea. Ralph E. Ellis, Bank Examiner....................... Braintree. Winthrop L. Graham, Bank Examiner. . . .Revere. Chester A. Gray, Bank Examiner.................. Somerville Paul C. Howley, Bank Examiner....................Lynn. Harold P. Jenlts, Bank Flxaminer................... Dorchester. Wm. B. Jensen, BankExaminer.......................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...............Lowell. Arthur S. Morey, Bank Examine’’..................Watertown. Roger W. Nutt. Bank Examiner.....................Needham. Geo. F. Powers, Bank Examiner.....................Arlington. John W. Slje. Bank Examiner.........................Malden. Nathan L. Whitten, Bank Examiner............ Campello. Harold E. Almy, Asst. Bank Examiner.. . .Dorchester. STATE BANK OFFICIALS AND EXAMINERS—Continued Name State Address Mass... . .Carl H. Bakei, Asst. Bank Examiner........... Wollaston. (cont.) Geo. W. Barron, Asst. Bank Examiner. . . .Beverly. Mich . . . . Minn.. .. . Miss.. . . . Mo......... . Joseph R. Beetle, Asst. Bank Examiner. . .Dorchester. Everett E. Bergstrom, Asst. Bank Exam. .Worcester. Harry P. Boyce, Asst. Bank Examiner. . . .Melrose Arthur L. Brackett, Asst. Bank Exam.......... Wollaston. Joseph L. Brighton, Asst. Bk. Exam..............Somerville. Joseph F. Oonnellan, Asst. Bk. Exam...........Brookline. Matthew Cushing, Asst. Bank Examiner ..Beverly. Phillip A. Damon, Asst. Bk. Exam................ Stoneham. Lawrence E. Donovan, Asst. Bk. Exam... .Brighton. Arthur W. Flint, Asst. Bk. Exam....................Wakefield. Samuel T. Foster, Asst. Bk. Exam................. Cambridge. Frank A. Hannan, Asst. Bank Examiner . .Malden. Raymond P. Harold, Asst. Bank Exam.. . .Worcester. Frederick A. Harris, Asst. Bank Ex............... Malden. Charles W. Flerzig, Asst. Bank Exam........... Roxbury. Paul H. Hey wood. Asst. Bank Examiner ..Wakefield. Francis J. Hillberg, Asst. Bank Exam........... Newton Lower Falls. Frank L. Hubbard, Asst. Bank Exam........... Waverley. Herbert L. Keeble, Asst. Bank Exam............Jamaica Plain. Harrison S. King, Asst. Bank Examiner. . .Melrose. Robert G. Leavitt, Asst. Bank Exam............Boston. Arthur B. Malone, Asst. Bank Exam............ Chelsea. Harland E. Miller, Asst. Bank Exam............ Lowell. Daniel L. Nye, Asst. Bank Exam................... Boston. R. Stuart Parker, Asst. Bank Exam...............Boston. John F. Rich, Asst. Bank Examiner..............Dorchester. W. S. Saveiy, Asst. Bank Examiner..............Plymouth. Harry L Sawyer, Asst. Bank Examiner. . Watertown. Harold B. Spurling, Asst. Bank Exam..........East Lynn. Carleton E. Staples, Asst. Bank Exam......... Brockton. Eugene F. Storrs, Asst. Bank Exam.............. Needham. B. F. Strand, Jr., Asst. Bank Exam.............. Brookline. Harold A. Tenney, Asst. Bank Examiner. .Boston. Stephen M. Torrey, Asst. Bank Exam......... Marblehead. John E. Turner, Asst. Bank Examiner.........Greenwood. George V. Wallace, Jr., Asst. Bk. Exam. . .Wakefield. Arthur Welwood, Asst. Bank Examiner . . . Boston. Albert M. Whitworth, Asst. Bank Exam.. .Lowell. Horace W. Wh.vnot, Asst. Bank Exam.........Roslihdale. Donald M. Williams, Asst. Bank Exam. . .Waban. .R. E. Reichert, Com. of Banking....................Lansing. C. E. Kaye, Deputy Com. of Banking.........Lansing. D. E. Lawrence, Chief Examiner.................... Eaton Rapids. R. H. Larabee, Chief Clerk................................ Lansing. E. W. Barber, Bank Examiner......................... Camden. B. F. Bernsteine, Bank Examiner................... Detroit. L. D. Bissell, Bank Examiner........................... Lansing. H. J. Brandt, Asst. Bank Examiner.............. Litchfield. K. H. Buttars, Asst. Bank Examiner............Bay City. P. D. Bywater, Bank Examiner.......................Riverdale. Ralph Clench, Small Loan Agency Exam. . Battle Creek. F. H. Coward. Bank Examiner........................ Webberville. W. D. Detweiler, Asst. Bank Examiner. . . .Lansing. W. C. Drevdahl, Asst. Bank Examiner. . . Ann Arbor. E. B. Finley, Jr., Bank Examiner...................Hartford. C. A. Fors, Bank Examiner............................... Sunfteld. I. H. Hamilton, Asst. Bank Examiner......... Ludington J. A. Hanslovsky, Asst. Bank Examiner. . .Ann Arbor. C. M. Heck, Bank Examiner.............................Lansing. R. I. Hudson, Bank Examiner..........................Decatur. Chas. W. Lee, Bank Examiner......................... Laingsburg. James Leenhouts, Bank Examiner..................Grand Rapids. Fred Marin, Bank Examiner............................. Ann Arbor. E. W. Nelson, Bank Examiner......................... Ann Arbor. L. D. Rose, Bank Examiner...............................Bay City. R. W. Rowe, Bank Examiner............................Hillsdale. C. G. Sherk, Jr., Asst. Bank Examiner. . . .Litchfield. A. C. Smith, Bank Examiner............................ Ann Arbor. Leo. Spencer, Asst. Bank Examiner...............Lansing. G. A. Stone, Bank Examiner.............................Grand Rapids. F. if. Swarthout, Exam. Finance Corp. Div. Lansing. H. G. Taylor, Asst. Bank Examiner..............Lansing. M. C. Taylor, Bank Examiner......................... Saginaw. R. P. Teeters, Asst. Bank Examiner............. Henderson. C. L. Van Frank, Bank Examiner.................. Grand Rapids. R. T. Willard, Bank Examiner.........................Grand Rapids. A. L. Wilson, Bank Examiner........................... Ludington. P. C. Yuli, Bank Examiner................................ Lansing. R. A. Carroll, Asst. Bank Examiner..............Lansing. E. G. McGugan. Asst. Bank Examiner. . . .Quincy. G. D. Monroe, Asst. Bank Examiner............Howell. A. J. Veigel, Commissioner of Banks.............114 State Capitol, St. Paul. Geo. H. Sivwright, Deputy Com. 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 Falls. A. P. Rotert, Bank Examiner........................... St. Paul. F. V. Artig, Bank Examiner..............................Sauk Rapids. A. F. Schwieger, Bank Examiner.................... Montevideo. N. D. Dixon, Bank Examiner........................... Minneapolis. H. R. Kneeland, Bank Examiner.................... St. Peter. M. E. Walsh, Bank Examiner.......................... St. Paul. W. J. Stutzman, Bank Examiner.................... Mankato. W. R. Nolan, Bank Examiner.......................... Minneapolis. H. V. Montgomery, Asst. Examiner..............Minneapolis. Henry Lende, Asst. Examiner...........................Appleton. G. V. Markey, Assistant Examiner................Worthington. Jacob Rigg, Bank Examiner.............................. Ada. R. S. Picha, Asst. Examiner.............................. St. Paul. E. A. Highum, Asst. Examiner........................ Preston. H. G. McConnell, Asst Examiner..................Mankato. C. E. Melbye, Asst. Examiner..........................Fergus Falls. C. M. Wenzel, Asst. Examiner......................... Kenyon. P. A. Peterson, Asst. Examiner........................Duluth. J. F. Angell, Asst. Examiner..............................Crookston. C. D. Lundin, Chief Clerk..................................St. Paul. . J. S. Love, Supt. of Banks..................................Jackson. .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. Truman Richards, Asst. Examiner.................St. Louis. C. L. Bollinger, Bank Examiner......................Springfield. Louis C. W. Hecht, Bank Examiner............. Overland. 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. R. H. Swan, Bank Examiner.............................Silex. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis State State Address Mo................Oscar C. Vemmer, Bank Examiner.................Owensville. (cont.) W. A. Shaw, Asst. Bank Examiner.......... . .Columbia. “ John O. Newberry, Asst. Bank Examiner. .Kansas City. “ Joseph Zick, Asst. Bank Examiner................. Kansas City. Mont.......... Jay G. Larson, Supt. of Banks, State Capitol Bldg...........................................................Helena. C. M. McCoy. Examiner.................................... Helena. S. L. Kleve, Examiner........................................ Helena. R. L. Smith, Examiner.........................................Helena. Geo. M. Robertson, Examiner..........................Helena. R. N. Hawkins, Asst. State Examiner..........Helena. A. E. Williamson, 2d Asst. State Examiner.Missoula. F. E. Williams, Deputy State Examiner. . .Billings. R. A. Lathom, Deputy State Examiner. . . .Columbus. A. M. Johnson, Deputy State Examiner. . .Thompson Falls. Neb............. Kirk Griggs, Secretary, Dept., of Trade & Commerce, State Capitol Bldg.....................Lincoln. L. E. Martin, Bank Examiner..........................Beatrice. 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. S. L. Hestbeck, Bank Examiner...................... Holdredge. Henry H. Schleuning, Bank Examiner.........Lincoln. Fred Allen, Bank Examiner............................... Lincoln. Nev..............True Vancill, State Bank Examiner............... Carson City. N. H........... Arthur E. Dole, Commissioner..........................Concord. George E. Farrand, Deputy Com.................... Concord. J............. Joseph E. Hammond, Deputy Com., 28 West State St..................................................Roselle. Horace Biddle, Asst. Bank Examiner........... Avon-by-the-Sea. Chas. H. 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 Examiner..............Westfield. Martin K. Fowler, Asst. Bank Examiner ..Newark. V. D. Peer, Bank Examiner...............................Summit. Jacob Kraus, Jr., Bank Examiner...................Weehawken Heights Hugh H. Hilson, Chief 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.. . .Bordentown. J. A. Maloney, Asst. Bank Examiner........... Jersey City. D. O. Stabily, Asst. Bk. Examiner.................Summit. John B. Cunningham, Asst. Bank Exam.. .Jersey City. Robert B. Allerdice, Bank Examiner............ Westfield. Hairy Prosser, Bank Examiner....................... Atlantic City. William S. Atbery, Junior Bank Exam.........Camden. Frank H. Betz, Junior Bank Examiner. . . .Kearny. John T. Connolly, Junior Bank Exam.......... Trenton. Theo. B. Furman, Junior Bank Exam.......... East Orange, N. J. Harry R. Grace, Jr., Junior Bk. Exam......... Laurel Springs, N. J. Alfied Sasser, Junior Bank Examiner...........Trenton. Edward B. Snook, Junior Bank Exam..........Princeton. William M. Struble, Junior Bk. Exam..........Belleville. John W. West, Junior Bank Examiner. . . .Hightstown. John A. Moore, Small Loan Examiners .... Gloucester City. James M. Sullivan, Small Loan Examiners.Elizabeth. N. M.......... Lawrence A. Tannne, State Bk. Exam...........Santa Fe. A. M. Richardson, Deputy State Bk. Ex. ..Santa Fe. Jacob Stapleton, Deputy State Bk. Exam... Santa Fe. ‘ Justo Lucero, Special Asst. Blue-sky Dept.. Santa Fe. N. Y............Frank H. Warder, Supt.. Journal Bldg., Plaza..........................................................................Albany, N. Y. George Overocker, 1st Deputy......................... Poughkeepsie. George A. Coleman, 2d Deputy....................... Albany. James J. Kennedy, 3d Deputy..........................New York City. Thomas J. O’Connell, 4th Deputy..................New York City. G. W. Egbert, Chief Examiner........................ 5lChambersSt.,N.Y. H. J. Young, Bank Examiner........................... Syracuse. H. S. Andrews, Bank Examiner.....................5lChambersSt.,N.\. R. W. Humphrey, Bank Examiner................ 5lChambersSt.,N.Y. A. F. Beyerle, Bank Examiner.........................5lChambersSt.,N.Y. J. S. Love, Bank Examiner................................51ChambersSt.,N.Y. N. Y. Killip, Bank Examiner........................... Oswego. Fletcher G. Crane, Bank Examiner................ 51ChambersSt.,N.Y. Clarence A. Masker, 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........................ 51ChambersSt.,N.Y. Peter N. Sliippee, Bank Examiner.................Albany. Nathaniel Orens, Bank Examiner...................51ChambersSt.,N.Y. Milton L. Masson, Bank Examiner............... 51ChainbersSt.,N.Y. S. I. Chittenden, Bank Examiner...................51ChainbersSt.,N.Y. Arthur B. Vogel, Bank Examiner...................51ChambersSt.,N.Y. E. W. Irving, Bank Examiner.......................... 51ChambersSt.,N.Y. C. E. Nathaway, Bank Examiner.................. Albany. Rho L. Bush, Bank Examiner..........................51ChambersSt.,N.Y. Louis N. Roe, Bank Examiner.........................51ChambersSt.,N.Y. Ralph T. Simmons, Bank Examiner............. 51ChambersSt.,N.Y. Arthur Koch. Bank Examiner..........................Saratoga Springs. G. M. Aldrich, Bank Examiner....................... 51ChambersSt.,N.Y. F. L. H. Holzer, Bank Examiner....................Buffalo. Wm. Cuflney, Bank Examiner.........................Syracuse. Geo. E. Varcoe, Bank Examiner..................... Rochester. Lawrence H. 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.V . Franklin W. Bright, Bank Examiner............ 51ChambersSt.,N.Y. E. J. Bangert, Bank Examiner......................... Holland. Fred T. Bolan, Bank Examiner.......................51ChambersSt.,N.Y. Charles Clarke, Bank Examiner......................Albany. Moitimer S. Cole. Bank Examiner................ 5lChambersSt.,N.Y Reginald W. Pawling, Bank Examiner........ 5iChambersSt.,N.YSamuel Rauch, Bank Examiner...................... 51ChambersSt.,N.YAlfred L. Taylor, Bang Examiner..................5lChambersSt.,N.Y. Wm. D. Navin, Bank Examiner................... 51ChambersSt.,N.Y. Charles D. Zimmer, Bank Examiner..........51ChambersSt.,N.\ • John M. Egan, Bank Examiner.......................Buffalo. Roy E. Miller, Bank Examiner.......................Buffalo. Ambrose J. Delaney, Bank Examiner.......... Rochester. Schuyler L. Baum, Bank Examiner...............Syracuse. Guy F. Baker, Bank Examiner........................Syracuse. Frank C. Maher. Bank Examiner.................. 5lChambersSt.,N.Y Stanley W. Farrell, Bank Examiner............. 51ChambeisSt.,N.Y Arthur P. McQuade, Bank Examiner...........51ChambersSt.,N.Y C. G. Niebank, Bank Examiner...................... Rochester. Thomas M. Little, Bank Examiner............... Buffalo. James A. Schaumburg. Bank Examiner. .. 51ChambersSr.,N.Y. Wm. P. Mitchell Bank Examiner................. 51ChambersSt.,N.Y. Andrew Eisen, Bank Examiner....................... 51ChambersSt.,N.Y. George R. Dise, Bank Examiner.................... Buffalo. Marcus Koster, Bank Examiner.....................51ChambersSt.,N.Y. Edward H. Leete, Bank Examiner.................51ChambersSt.,N.Y. John C. Hasbrouck, Bank Examiner............ 51ChambersSt.,N.Y. John J. Sullivan, Bank Examiner................... Albany. Guy E. Thompson, Bank Examiner..............Buffalo. ' Thomas F. Maude, Bank Examiner...............51ChambersSt.,N.Y. Chas. H. Schoch, Bank Examiner.................. 5lChambersSt.,N.Y. Blanche M. Borthwick, Bank Examiier. . .Albany. 12 STATE BANK OFFICIALS AND EXAMINERS—Continued State • Name Address State N. Y......... .John A. Tripp, Bank Examiner.......................Rochester (cont.) K. A. Brennan, Bank Examiner...................... 51ChambersSt.,N Y William J. McAuliffe, Bank Examiner.........51ChambersSt.,N.Y. Alien L. Gillett, Bank Examiner.....................510hambersSt. N Y August Ihlefeld, Jr., Bank Examiner............ olOhambersSt.iNw! Earl Harkness, Bank Examiner....................... 51ChambersSt. N.Y Geo. J. Riedel, Bank Examiner....................... 51ChambersSt.,N.Y. Hugh H. Williams, Bank Examiner...............Syracuse. Geo. A. Porter, Bank Examiner...................... ijlOhambersSt.,N.Y. Wm. J. Koepchen, Bank Examiner............... 510hambersSt.,N.Y. Edward Zimmerman, Bank Examiner..........51ChambersSt.,N.Y Walter K. Wiesner, Bank Examiner............. 51ChambersSt.,N.Y. Bernard J. Hirschfleld, Bank Examiner . . 51ChambersSt.,N.Y. N . John Mitchell, Chief Bank Examiner, Bank ing Dept., Corporation Commission.......... Raleigh. W. L. Williams, State Bank Examiner........ Raleigh. W. M. Wiggins, Asst. Bank Examiner.........Raleigh. G. N. Hensen, State Bank Examiner............ Raleigh. D. M. Darden, State Bank Examiner.......... Raleigh. L. H. Harrison, State Bank Examiner.........Raleigh. Jno. A. Campbell, Jr., Asst. Bk. Exam. . . .Raleigh. B. R. Roberts, Asst. State Bk. Exam...............Raleigh. N . Gilbert Semingson, State Bank Examiner . Bismarck. F. B. McAneney, Chief Deputy Exam......... 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. Erickson, Deputy Examiner................ Bismarck. O. A. Engemoen, Deputy Examiner............. Valley City. Harold Nomland, Deputy Examiner............ Fargo. H. C. Duntley, Deputy Examiner.................Cathay. J. R. Snyder, Deputy Exam. (City and Co.)Cat.hay. J. A. Brown, Deputy Exam. (City and Co.). Rolla. T. J. Hagen, Deputy Exam. (City and Co.). Grand Forks. . H. E. Scott, Superintendent..............................Columbus. Frank R. Ambrose, Asst. Supt..........................Columbus. Chas. G. Saffln, Attorney Examiner............. Columbus. George T. Blake, Foreign Ex. and Tr. OfficerColumbus. E. H. Blair, Bank Examiner..............................Columbus. W. J. Skehan, Bank Examiner.........................Toledo. Henry J. Schulte, Bank Examiner................. Cincinnati. Thomas McEldowney, Examiner....................Upper Sandusky. W. J. Monahan, Asst. Examiner.....................Columbus. C. W. Miller, Liquidating Agent.....................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.................. Lakewood. Park G. Ogden, Trust Examiner.....................Columbus E. M. Hoopengarner, Asst. Trust Exam .. .Columbus. D. A. Filler, Chief Examiner.............................Columbus. E. R. Schurr, Bank Examiner.......................... London. N. E. Reichelderfer, Bank Examiner............ Circleviile. C. A. Ladrach, Examiner..................................Sugar Creek Wm. Purdy, Examiner......................................... Findlay. Vernon L. Hawk, Examiner.............................. Tiffin.' Lawrence E. Smart, Examiner......................... Oberlin. Hugh L. Leggett. Asst. Examiner.................. Columbus. Ira J. Fulton, Bank Examiner..........................Lakewood. Paul Warner, Bank Examiner.......................... Utica. H. F. Ashley, Asst. Bank Examiner..............Oberlin. Cyrus I.awrence, Asst. Examiner....................Columbus Robert Sewell, Asst. Trust Examiner........... Columbus. Wilson Roach, Asst. Trust Examiner........... Columbus. .J. D. Pennington, Bank Examiner, State Capitol Bldg.........................................................Oklahoma City. O. B. Mothersead, Bank Commissioner, State Capitol Bldg...........................................Oklahoma City. Waldo Watkins, Asst. Bank Commissioner, State Capitol Bldg............................................. Oklahoma City. W. C. Ernest, Bank Examiner, State Capitol Building................................................ Oklahoma City. 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, Building & Loan Auditor, 408 Heniy Bldg...................................................Oklahoma City. Ore.. . F. C. Bramwell, Supt. of Banks...................... Salem. Guy N. Hickok, Asst. Supt. and Examiner Salem. Herbert F. Clark, Examiner.............................. Salem. E. A. Simonton. Secretary..................................Salem. Tinkham Gilbert, Examiner.............................. Salem. H. O. Voget, Examiner........................................ Salem. Anna E. Lennon, Stenographer........................Salem. George E. Cusick, Asst. Examiner................. Salem. Fred F. Moes, Examiner..................................... Salem. R. W. Davis. Examiner....................................... Salem. M. W. Starbuck, Examiner................................Salem. Pa. .Peter G. Cameron, Secretary of Banking, State Capitol Bldg.............................................. Harrisburg. James A. Taylor, First Deputy Secretary. . Indiana. Irland M. Beckman, Second Deputy Secy. Erie. Walter E. Burns, Third Deputy Secy............Harrisburg. E. J. Sitgreaves, Chief, Division of ReportsHarrisburg. H. H. Eshbaoh, Chief, Bureau of Bldg. & Loan Associations............................................... Harrisburg Laurence C. Glass, Chief Clerk........................Harrisburg. George H. Orth, Chief, Bureau of Private Banks........................................................................ Harrisburg. Walter .T. Fallows, Chief Deputy, Bureau of Securities................................................................. Harrisburg. Rolland L. Adams, Examiner............................Newport. George A Augherton, Examiner......................Hatboro. Harold L. Beckley, Examiner............................Paxtang. W. M. Boggs, Examiner...................................... Valencia. A. Rise Bowman, Examiner.............................Lebanon. Walter C. Brenneis, Examiner.........................Conneautville. Chas. V. Brown, Examiner.................................Philadelphia. M. H. Callender, Examiner................................Dunmore. R. B. Carmany, Examiner.................................. Harrisburg. Ernest M. Clark, Examiner................................Philadelphia. Wm. V. Davies, Examiner.................................. Harrisburg. Harold H. Davison, Examiner..........................Meadville. Fred K. Dennison, Examiner............................ Bywood. Thomas Dixon, Examiner................................... Philadelphia. Robert W. Doty, Examiner................................Bywood. John B. Dunlap, Examiner.................................Muncy. Timothy A. Durkin, Examiner......................... Bryn Mawr. Robert G. Felix Examiner...’........................... Philadelphia. W. Clifford Ferry, Examiner..............................Pittsburgh. J. Allen Gebhart, Examiner............................... Lebanon. Frank Glatfelter, Examiner................................ Columbia. Raymond H. Gorsuch, Examiner.................... Hopewell. Arthur G. Graham, Jr., Examiner.................. Olney. Frederick C. Hallowell, Examiner................... Wayne. O. C. Headland, Examiner................................. Pitcairn. Robert A. Henderson, Examiner......................Indiana. George L. Hill, Examiner....................................Lansford. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Name Address Pa.................Walter S. Hoke, Examiner...................................Newport. (cont.) T. Earl Hutchinson, Examiner.......................... Chester. Frank H. Jackson, Examiner...........................Drexel Hill. Frank W. Jackson, Examiner..........................Apollo. Elwood H. Keithan, Examiner.......................... Sunbury. Leo M. Kelly, Examiner.......................................Philadelphi K. Thurman Kent, Examiner..............................Ashland. Ralph W. Knowles, Examiner........................... Philadelphia James W. Lance, Examiner.................................Philadelphia. C. F. T. Lancaster, Examiner............................ Philadelphia. R. F. Landis. Examiner.........................................Halifax. R. S. Landis, Examiner...................................... Lancaster M. J. Lavin, Examiner....................................... Wilkes-Barre A. V. Lees, Examiner............................................. Swarthmore. Ralph Lischy, Examiner....................................... Gettysburg Charles J. Long, Examiner.................................. Philadelphia. Thos. H. McCandless, Examiner......................Bellevue. Wm. J. McCuen, Examiner.................................st. Davids. J. H. McLaughlin, Examiner............................. Wilkinsburg. Hays W. Mat-tern, Examiner............................. Tyrone. Robert R. Moore, Examiner............................... Bellevue Harold L. Oberheim, Examiner*........................ Philadelphia C. Edwin Payne, Examiner..............................Pleasant Mount. Edward J. Price. Examiner.............................. New Kensington Ralph W. Reitzol, Examiner............................... Williamsport Ralph S. Ruth, Examiner.................................... Scranton. Charles K. Scheffter, Examiner.......................Pittsburgh Howard L. Scott. Examiner.............................. Ben Avon. R. H. Shick, Examiner.......................................... Duquesne George T. Sloan. Examiner................................. Carnegie William R. Smith, Examiner............................ Philadelphia Charles W. Snyder, Examiner.......................... Sunbury. Wm. H. Soule, Examiner..................................... Newport" Wm. II. Spangler, Examiner............................Kingston Chas. A. Steele, Examiner................................... Franklin John T. Stewart, Examiner.................................Pittsburgh Raymond R. Stoner, Examiner......................... Harrisbur0George M. Stouds, Jr., Examiner.................... Chester. George S. Summers, Examiner.......................... Harrisburg J. D. Swigart, Examiner......................................Kittanning". E. B. Toppin, Examiner......................................Mt. Joy Wm. R. Turner. Examiner.................................Chester Cyril G. Vogel, Examiner................................... Pittsburgh John S. AVard, Examiner.......................................Ridley Park Paul D. Williams, Examiner......................... Punxsutawnpv Robert A. Wilson, Examiner.............................. Littletown AV. R. Wirth, Examiner........................................ Pittsburgh William K. Walker, Examiner........................... Plains Otto P. Lippman, Private Bank Examiner. Harrisburg George H. Slaine, Private Bank Examiner. Greensburg Mark I. Walker, Investigator, Bureau of Securities... .............................................. Grafton. Henry AValton, Jr., Investigator, Bureau of .. Securities................................................................. Philadelphia. AVm. J. Brennan, Investigator, Bureau of Securities................................................... Philadelnhin “ Ralph W. Evans, Investigator, Bureau of •‘ -V ,T Securities .......... .......... .............. ...............Harrisburg. Michael P. Keane, Investigator, Bureau of ,, „ Securities................................ ................................. Harrisburg. Samuel M. Pursel, Investigator, Bureau of ,, uTSiecuri^e?,......... x- ■ • • • :....................................... Harrisburg. Walter Seiler, Investigator, Bureau of Securities................................................................ Dauphin. R. I..............Geo. H. Newhall, Bank Commissioner, State House.......................................................... 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. ............. Albert S. Fant, State Bank Examiner........... Columbia W. V. Sutherland, Aud. State Institutions. Columbia T. M. Milling, Associate Bank Examiner. .Greenwood W. Royden Watkins, Associate Bk. Exam... Greenville. F. E. Watson, Asst. Bank Examiner.............Marion. D. J. Winn, Asst. Bank Examiner.................Darlington D. T. Simmons, Asst. Bank Examiner.........Columbia. ).............Fred R. Smith. Supt. of Banks...........................Pierre. A. E. Fossum, Deputy Supt. of Banks........ Pierre! C. W. Ott, Asst. Supt. of Banks.....................Pierre R. E. Willy, Counsel.............................................Pierre! U. G. Stevenson, Bank Examiner...................Sioux Falls. E. J. Morris, Bank Examiner............................Aberdeen Chris Hirning, Bank Examiner.........................Mitchell. S. E. Anderson, Bank Examiner...................... Watertown. G. W. Schumacher, Bank Examiner............. Pierre. B. F. Bambenek, Bank Examiner.................. Aberdeen. F. S. Barber, Bank Examiner............................ Onida. . . .S. S. McConnell, Supt. of Banks....................Nashville Hallum W. Goodloe, Asst. Supt. of Banks. . Nashville. J. F. Hunt, Bank Examiner..............................Memphis H. G. 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, Banking Commissioner.. .Austin. W. A. Sandlin, Deputy Banking Com..........Austin. Utah...........Seth Pixton, Bank Commissioner, Room 217, State Capitol Bldg. .......................................Salt Lake City. AV. 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, State St.Montpelier Jessie A. Watkins, Chief Clerk........................ Montpelier L. C. Desautels, Bank Examiner.....................Montpelier. R. A. Domina, Bank Examiner....................... Montpelier. Va . .M. E. Bristow, Chief Examiner, 1010 State Office Bldg.............................................................. Richmond. L. R. Ritchie, Examiner......................................Richmond. C. T. Allen, Examiner.......................................... Kenbridge. B. .T. Woodward, Examiner................................Richmond. R. M. Charlton, Examiner.................................Christiansburg. E. A. Leake, Examiner................... Richmond. E. J. Smith, Examiner..........................................Saluda. R. T. Short, Asst. Examiner............................. Front Royal W. S. Burnley, Clerk............................................ Richmond. D. T. Zentmeyer, Asst. Examiner................ Bristol. Wash...........A. R. Gardner, Director of Efficiency, 100 Old Capitol Bldg........................................ Olympia. H. C. Johnson, Supervisor of Banking.........Olympia. H. H. Hansen, Deputy Supervisor of Bkg.. . Olympia. C. S. Moody, Asst. Supervisor of Banking . . Olympia. H. S. Wilson, Bank Examiner.......................... Spokane. R. L. Gentry, Bank Examiner......................... Spokane. F. R. Amende, Bank Examiner....................... Seattle. Geo. H. Jackson, Bank Examiner.................. Spokane. C. E. Jenks, Bank Examiner.............................Yakima. S. Zeno Varnes, Bank Examiner......................Olympia. I. Williams Examiner.................. ........................Seattle. 13 STATE BANK OFFICIALS AND EXAMINERS—Continued State Name Address W. Ya.........H. A. Abbott, Com. of Banking........................Charleston. (eont.) E. L. Morrison, Deputy Com. of Banking. .Charleston. “ George M. Weekley, Asst. Com............x. . . .Spencer. “ W. K. Seal. Assistant Commissioner...............Charleston. “ Marion Workman, Assistant Commissioner. Keyser. “ Harold Sayre, Asst. Com....................................... Letart. “ Helen S. Barringer, Secretary.............................Charleston “ Alta Wagner, Asst. Secretary..............................Charleston. “ W. Ray Tabler, Asst. Com..................................Parkersburg. “ L. I). Griffin, Asst. Commissioner.................... Clarksburg. Wis .Thomas Herreid. Commissioner, State Capi tol Bldg.....................................................................Madison. W. H. Richards, Deputy Com...........................Black River Falls. C. E. Butters, Chief Clerk.................................. Madison. R. B. Ellis, Bank Examiner................................ Madison. C. P. Diggles, Examiner...................................... Madison. Chas. T. Shape, Bank Examiner..................... Milwaukee. W. C. Edwards, Bank Examiner.....................Madison. G. W. Jamison, Bank Examiner......................Madison. N. E. Hanshus, Examiner...................................Eau Claire. Geo. O. F. Poundstone, Examiner.................. Mellon. M. O. Tuhus, Examiner....................................... Viroqua. Name Address State Wis......... . .Jno. E. Mahoney, Examiner............................. Madison. C. M. Morrison, Clerk......................................... Madison. (cont.) E. F. Witzig, Examiner....................................... Eau Claire. E. L. Richardson, Examiner.............................. Fond du Lac. Stanley Schafer, Examiner................................. Madison. Gustave Shape, Examiner....................................Madison. Walter Nyhus Examiner..................................... Madison. John Bosshard. Examiner....................................Bangor. Victor A. Emilson, Asst. Examiner............... La Crosse. Thos. M. Purtell. Examiner..............................Madison. Stanley R. Caldwell. Asst. Examiner........... Lodi. Jos. Donovan, Clerk..............................................Madison. John C. Stedman, Clerk...................................... Sturgeon Bay. Tomas Nelson. Clerk..............................................Madison. Harry Neprud. Clerk............................................. Blair. . .S. A. Brown, State Examiner...........................Cheyenne. Wyo. C. F. Dickinson, Examiner................................ Cheyenne. LeRoy Joyce, Examiner...................................... Cheyenne. W. R. Powers, Examiner.................................... Cheyenne. J. A. Reed, Examiner........................................... Cheyenne. L. A. McWhetley, Examiner............................ Cheyenne. LIST OF NATIONAL BANK EXAMINERS AND DISTRICTS January, 1927 Name and Federal Reserve District Name and Federal Reserve District Address Fiman, C. F. (R.)........... Fraser, Jesse A. (10) Freeman, Otis M. (1) French, H. S. (7). . . Fuller, H. R. (7) ... . . . . . Pierre. So. Dak. Room 2, King Bldg., Norfolk, Neb. ... .89 Angell St.. Providence, R. I. . . . .213 Federal Bldg.. Des Moines, Iowa. ....930 Grand Rapids National Bank Bldg.. Grand Rapids, Mich. Funsten, James B. (2). . . . .720 U. S. Custom House. New York, N. Y. Funsten, Wm. P. (7) . . .... Box 425, Evanston, Ill. . . . . P. O. Box 1058, Pittsburgh, Pa. Furbee, Ernest M. (4). ....Care of Div. of Insolvent National Banks, Garrett, Robert D. . . . Office of Comptroller of Currency, Wash ington, D. C. Gilbert, H. B .(11)..................... P. O. Box 318 Wichita Falls, Texas. Glazier, Chas. A. (12)...............P. O. Box 226, Provo, Utah. Goodhart, R. W. (9) (R.). . . .Office of Comptroller of Currency, Treasury Dept., Washington, D. C. Graham, Herbert A. (4).......... 406 National Bank Bldg., Wheeling, W. Va. Gray. W. M. (R.)....................... First National Bank. Joseph, Ore. Green, A. W. (3) (J.G.)........... Gen. Delivery, Reading. Penn. Green, Charles W (5)...............P. O. Box 752, Cumberland, Md. Greene, Thos. M. (1)................ Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Boston, Mass. Greenfield. Jas. B. (7)...............201 Federal Bldg., Peoria. Ill. Hartman, Chas. H. (3)............ 1414 Jefferson Bldg., Philadelphia, Pa. Harwood. E. G. (7) (J.G.) . ..164 W. Jackson Blvd., Chicago, Ill. Hedrick, Gilbar C. (11)........... 1706 Republic Bank Bldg., Dallas, Texas. Hess, Grant H. (9).....................Care of City Insurance Agency. Bismarck, N. Dak. Hill, Roger W. (2)...................... P. O. Box 111, Elsmere, N. Y. Hodgson, R. M. (2)................... 1813 Kilbourne Place. N. W., 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. Huck, Win. F. (9)...................... 306 Dak. Bk. Bldg., Aberdeen, S. Dak. Hurley, Michael J. (1)............. Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Boston, Mass. Hutt, Wm. E. (11).....................Sherman, Texas. Johnson, C. E. H. (7)............... 331 Federal Bldg., Milwaukee, Wis. Johnson, Robin M. (R.).......... Care of First National Bank, Hearne, Texas. Joseph, Edw. M. (7)..................Isabel Apt., 9 West Madison St., Danville, Ill. Kane, Thos. F. (5).....................1036 Munsey Bldg., Washington, D. C. Kane, W. W. (S) (J.G.)..........1310 Federal Commerce Trust Bldg., St.Louis, Mo. Kelly. Burdette (R.)................. First National Bank, Torrington, Wyo. Kennedy, L. G. (10)..................875 S. Williams St., Denver, Colo. Ketner, John H. (3)...................P. O. Box 32, Altoona, Pa. Klein, Benton (2)........................407 West 146th St., New York, N. Y. Krippel, F. W. (6)......................504 Post Office Bldg., Atlanta, Ga. Lahman, H. S. (R.)................... Care of Farmers & Merchants Nat’l Bank Fairbury, Neb. Laird, H. A.....................................213 Federal Bldg., Des Moines, Iowa Lamb, Ernest (11)......................P. O. Box 1062, Austin, Texas. Lamm, R. Foster (12)..............1107 A. Matter Bldg., Fresno, Calif. Lammond, W. M. (6)...............P. O. Box 1364, New Orleans, La. Lanning, L. C. (2)...................... 720 U. S. Custom House, blew York, N. Y. Lanum, H. L. (4)........................ P. O. Box 621, Cincinnati, Ohio Leyburn, A. P. (7)......................Room 1203, 164 West Jackson Blvd., 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, McBryde, W. W. (5 & 6). . . . care of Comptroller of Currency, Wasnington, Proctor, John L. (8 & 10).. . .care of Comptroller of Currency. Washington, Hodgson. H. M. (1-2-3 & 4). care of Comptroller of Currency, Washington, DISTRICT CHIEF NATIONAL BANK EXAMINERS (By Federal Reserve Districts) Williams F. D. (1).....................Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Boston, Mass. Reeves Owen T. Jr. (2)...........720 IT. S. Custom House, New York, N. Y. Newnham. Stephen L. (3)... .1414 Jefferson Bldg.. Philadelphia, Pa. . Thomas Thomas C. (4)...........715 Federal Reserve Bk.Bldg..Cleveland,Ohio. Folder W P (5)......................... 1036 Munsey Bldg., Washington, D. C. Robb, Ellis D. (61.......................504 Post Office Bldg., Atlanta. Ga. Sims Howard M. (7)................ 1203, 164 W. Jackson Blvd., Chicago, Ill. 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, L. K. (10).................... 800 Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. Collier, Richard H. (11)...........1706 Republic Bank 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) (J.G.).. .P. O. Box 1546, Muskogee, Okla. Allsup A S (7)........................... 1428 N. Main St., Decatur, Ill. Amrhein, Joseph A. (5)............910 Va. Ry. and Power Bldg., Richmond, Va. Anderson, E. F. (6) (R.)......... Georgia, Nat’l Bk. Bldg., Athens Ga Anderson, O. A. (9)....................Care of G. W. Swords, Am. Natl. Bank, Billings, Mont. Ashwood Cecil (2) ................... 720 U. S. Custom House, New York, N. Y. Bailey J’ L (5)........................... P. O. Box 1185, Huntington, W. Va. Baker’Wm B. (3)..................... 1414 Jefferson Bldg., Philadelpnia, Pa. Baldridge, Wm. H. (12)...........403 Empire State Bldg.. Spokane. Wash. Basham, A. A. (6).......................P. O Box 940. Knoxville. Tenn Beatftn, Otis W. (2) (J.G.). . .720 U. S Custom House. New York, N. Y. Beise S. C. (9) (J. G.)............. 1334 First National Soo Line Bldg., Minne apolis, Minn. Bina James C. (9)......................4532 Grand Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. Bleakley, Ben. J. (4)..................P. O Box 151 Lima Ohio. Blv J Garver (7)....................... 326 South 15th St.. Richmond, Ind. Boa'rdman, Paul (11)(J. G.) P. O. Box 614, Abilene, Texas Boldin, Bernard E. (2)............. P. O. Bldg. Troy, N Y. Boysen Alfred (3).......................Post Office Bldg., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Brennan F. P. (10)....................P. O. Box 296, Salina, Kans. Brown, Samuel H. (10)............ P O. Box 462, Coffewille Kan Bryan, Chas. A. (9)....................1334 First National Soo Line Bldg., Minne apolis, Minn. Byers R W. (4)..........................P. O. Box 1058. Pittsburgh, Pa. Campbell, Geo. H. (10)............506 California Bldg., Denver, Colo. Carolan, Wm. B. (1)..................Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Boston. Mass. Carson, Thos. D. (5)................. 1036 Munsey Bldg., Washington,_ D C Carter, Aubrey B. (U.).............Room 185. Treasury Dept., Washington, D C. Chapman, Edw. L. (10)........... 800 Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. Chorpening, I. I. (12)............... 400 H. W. Heilman Bldg., Los Angeles, Calif. Clark, Addison A. (4)............... 715 Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Cleveland, Ohio. Clark, Joseph A. (10) (J.G.)..P. O. Box 574, Hutchinson. Kan. Coffin. George M. (Rec.).........71 College St., New Haven. C<mn. Coffin Gilbert S. (12)...............1103 Alexander St., San Francisco, Calil. Colley. L. H. (4)......................... P. O. Box 273, Salem, Ohio Collins, L. C. (11).......................P- O. Box 1223 Shreveport La Conner, Joseph H. (8).............. 214 Federal Bldg., Evansville Ind. Cooney, Dan. H. (4)..................715 Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Cleveland, Ohio. Cottingham, T. J. (6)...............823 Age-Herald Bldg., Birmingham, Ala. Cowan, David (R.).................... First National Bank of Las Vegas, E. Las Vegas, N. Mex. Crawley, Wm. C. (12)..............228 Post Office Bldg., Portland, Ore. Crossen, Gail W. (4)................. P. O. Box 463. Columbus, Ohio. Culver, William A. (2)............. 17 Riverside Ave., Baldwin, L. I., N. Y. Dalton, John W. (5)..................P. O. Box 958, Charlotte, N. C. Davenport, H. B. (3)................ P. O. Box 61, Lancaster, Pa. Davis, Thomas II. (5).............. P. O. Box 1162, Columbia, S. C. Denton, Frank R. (10)............ 800 Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Kansas City, 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. R. (2)................. 720 U. S. Custom House, New York, N. Y. Dye Samuel W. (8)..................422 W. Jackson St., Carbondale, Ill. Elkins, Lewis R. (8)..................732 New St.. Springfield, Mo. Evans, Clyde J. (6)................... P. O Box 1828, Atlanta. Ga. Evans W C. (12)......................400 H. W. Heilman Bldg., Los Angeles, Calif. Faris A B. (4).............................P. O. Box 506. Richmond. Ky. Foster, Cha.les W. (11)........... 519 Bedell Bldg., San Antonio, Texas. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Address Lifsev, W. P. (6)......................... P. O. Box 442, Albany, Ga. Loewer, Charles H. (3) (J.G.) 1414 Jefferson Bldg., Philadelphia, Pa. Lorang. Peter J. (2)................... 720 U. S. Custom House. New York. N. Y. Luce F H...................................... Sixth Ave. & Spring St., Seattle, Wash. Luiken, John B. (6)................... 720 Bell Bldg.. Montgomery. Ala. Lytle, Frank S. (9).....................1334 First National Soo Line Bldg., Minne apolis, Minn. McCans, Alexander B. (11). .P. O. Box 1584, Waco, Texas. McConaughy, R. C. (3)...........1414 Jefferson Bldg., Philadelphia, Pa. McCreight, Harry A. (7).........1203, 164 West Jackson Blvd., Chicago, Ill. 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)............ 1103 Alexander Bldg., San Francisco.Calif. MacDonald, F. G. (2)...............P. O. Box 926, Buffalo. New York. Madland, Leland L. (12).........238 Central Bldg., Seattle, Wash. 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)..................... Apt. 22, West 152nd 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. Nashville Tenn Miller. Louis A. (10)................. 800, Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. Moon Earl W. (7)......................335 Federal Bldg., Rock Island .Ill. 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)............. 16 Pennacook St., Manchester, N. H. 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. L. (10) (R.).............224 Federal Bldg.. Salina. Kan. Northcutt, V. H. (6)................. P. O. Box 1175. Lakeland. Fla. Parker, Edw. F. (1)................... Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Boston, Mass. 14 LIST OF NATIONAL BANK; EXAMINERS AND DISTRICTS—Continued Name and Federal Reserve District Name and Federal Reserve District Address Pearson, Herbert (R.)...............Insolvent Div., Washington, D. C., care of n —. ,r _ , Comptroller of Currency. o6??’ V.(10) (J.G.) . . P. O. Box 545, Guthrie. Okla. Pnwpr’ - (7)................. 1st National Bank, Cumberland, Iowa. Power , R. E. (9).......................... 62 S. Dale St., St. Paul, Minn Price, Albert E. (12) (J.G.)...326 Yates Bldg., Boise, Idaho. Ramsdell, Paul C. (5)................1036 Munsey Bldg., Washington D C Ransom, Frank T. (3)............... 1414 Jefferson Bldg., Philadelphia, Pa SS”>vFr^n»k • • • -720 u- s- Custom House, New York, N.Y. Remholdt, Carl A. (8).............. 207 Federal Bldg., Louisville, Ky Ruf \......... City National Bank, Bismarck, N. D. Roberts!' H mi B1.dS-- Los Angeles Calif. Koberts, J. H (11) (J.G.) .. . ,P. O. Box 235, Palestine, Texas. Ross M n ',in V mi....................°f,Fedp,ral Reserve Bank, Houston.Texas Boss, Murdo A. (9).................... P. O. Box 401, Hastings, Neb. Ryan, Prank- J. (1)..................... Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Boston, Mass SandersVarn<ie ....................130 W Adams St., Kirkwood, Mo. Sanders, J. L. (7)......................... P. O. Box 96, Spencer. Iowa. ichechter ' Wm J2 m................ H H,ellman Bldg., Los Angeles. Calif. T Vr t \..............1812 Burns Ave., Detroit, Mich. 8 evisnrfHmv mi (U-)........... H^worth Ave., Hollywood, Calif. Sevison. Henry (9)...................... 17 Magill Block, Fargo, N Dak Sheehan’ W°F (J-G.).. . . 1103 Alexander Bldg., San Francisco, Calif. 1 ™ ...............720 s* Custom House, New York N Y Smith’ c:!nep'Cep^' 2 ..............72°U.S. Custom House, blew York, N. Y. F- (.3.\.......................P. O. Box 981, Harrisburg, Pa. IS th ?ohn h mViR'i..........5r 9- Box 336, West Newton, Pa. brnitn, John H. (9) (R.).......... VVeiser, Idaho. Smith’ !ovCF .................. u-,8-.Custom House, New York, N. Y. 2™,,’ Koy E. (IL). . ................Care of First National Bank, Sterling Colo Snarm6Tnhr^w*7(2)............ '20 U S. Custom House, New York. N. Y.’ Snvdcr ’ vprmm'r5 m\...............j,037 Munsey Bldg., Washington, D. C. snj cier, vemou (j. (3)..............P. O. Pox 231 Sunhurv po Stevens, Lyle T, (9)................... 1334 First National-Soo Line Bldg., Minne04. . „ . , apolis, Minn. Stewart. Adelia M....................... Boom 217, Office Comptroller of Currency, Washington, D. C. J?° (J.G.) (R.) 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. (R.) .... Lock Box 450, M andan, N. Dak. Stuart, Robt. K. (7) Swenson, Loren T. (4).............. 715 ^Federal' Reserv^Bank'mdg., Cleveland. Swords, Geo. W. (R.)................Care of First National Bank, Libby, Mont. Tucker ft“h %....................... 213 BWeral Bldg., Des Moines. Iowa. lucker, G. H. (5).......................P O. Box 332, Raleigh, N. C. Utt, John F. (7)........................... 1203 164 W. Jackson Blvd., Chicago, Hi. Matts, John L. (2) (J.G.). . . .720 U. S. Custom House, New York N Y Whffiffie’AP m U2)............If Federal Bldg.. PocatelloMdahm’ N’ Y’ Whipple, A. P. (4)..................... 7lo^^Federal Reserve Bank Bldg., Cleveland, Whhe’ n' .......................E' c/b’ox 1058. Pittsburgh, Pa. White, O. W. (10) .....................P. O. Box 498, Cheyenne Wyo Williams’ cflWk'l(2............f6 EaSt PfS1® -St" Syracuse^ N. Y. Williams T M n'2\...................anTw 6w atNn tl°naiE]anki Wilmington,N.C »S!K?%£A.«»::::::::«=?/ &5gSSS %i5V.::::::: Va- Wright, E. M. (12).....................228 P. O. Bldg Portland Ore Wright, Irwin D. (9)................. 1334 First National-Soo Line Bldg., Minneeapolis, Minn. Young, WTm. R. (8)....................407 Central State National Bank Bldg Memphis, Tenn. National Bank Examiner Junior Grade. Acting as Receiver of National Bank. (W.F.C.) (U.) 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. ha* proved 'of' great be™^," ad°Pted What “ kn°W" “ tha " Numerical Transit System,- which KEY BOOK rontlin°US t,adopted the Y51.6111 deviSdd by the committee and authorized the publication of the A B A’ JvfcsY BOOK containing the names of the banks and the numbers assigned. EXPLANATION OF SYSTEM includedT!rithreN^eYor?c”rrKaC„hsafcigtvatKa„bywhP'iffiX which was included with Omiha Buffalo NY J™* °* Brooklyn, which was ,! ■ ‘"S!1"1"1 wltt' Ka"a“ City. Mo., and South Omaha. ba„ki„g centers were^23^ .^"e c^ief T^^tt’ riryer ciS a“°rdmS “ *ha G°v.mme„t Census ot 1910. fcjtEZZTTSJi The lower numUm w.m "hus Ls’^ned to 1“ these cities? Tr“SUrer and A“iatant Treater, o( the Umte(1 States and the Post Offices were also numbered in larger state Prefix numbers, together with clearing house numbers, were used in numbering the banks in the h^ A« ¥cNalJy & Co- of Chicago, publishers of the Key to Numerical System of The American Bankers which does noTap'peTrTn"the KeTandtn MaJchVnd September’"e^hTea^pShSfsuppt^pon^ls^L^^ Ze any COn,amme al1 t!ha”^ whi=h have taken place si The Ninth Edition was published in May, 1926. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 15 previous LsueEtMhe igy'or !ff any at iroc r\r? ■n'/^TD'C'Tr1 TVT PntMC VALUES OF FOKElLlJN LUIJNS treasury Department. Office of this Secretary. Washinaton, D. C„ January 1, 1927 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 July 1, 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 ~T [ Value in | of 1 Remarks. Legal Standard. Monetary Unit, i Terms U. S. Money. 1 Peso____________ 10.9648 Currency: Paper, normally convertible at 44 per cent of face value; now inconvertible. .1407 Gold____________ Schilling________ .1890 One Belga equals 5 paper francs. Gold and silver.. Belga ---------------.3893 12H bolivianos equal 1 pound sterling. Gold____________ Boliviano________ .5462 Currency: Government paper a part of which is legally Gold____________ Milreis convertible ai 16 pence (=$0.3244) per milreis.; now inconvertible. 4.8665 Pound sterling___ — ____ British Colonies in Austral Gold asia and Africa, 1.0000 Gold ________ Dollar .1930 Onlrl Lev_____ _____ 1.0000 Dollar__________ G«ld .1217 Gold____________ Peso____________ .6513 'Amoy___ .6493 Canton .... .6229 Cheefoo... .6362 Chin Kiang .6024 Fuchau.—. .6627 Haikwan — .6093 Hankow... The tael is a unit of weight; not a coin. The .6311 Kiaochow . customs unit is the Haikwan tael. The values of .6445 Nanking... Tael other taels are based on their relation to the value .6107 Niuchwang . of the Haikwan tael. Silver__________z .6261 The Yuan silver dollar of 100 cents is the monetary .6349 Peking___ unit of the Chinese Republic: it is equivalent to .5949 Shanghai.. .644+ of the Haikwan tael. .6016 Swatow.__ .6554 Takau....... . .6311 „ Tientsin... fVnan .4220 Hongkong. ].4283 Dol.. British__ Mexican silver pesos issued under Mexican decree of .4315 ..Mexican... Nov. 13. 1918, are of silver content approximately 41% less than the dollar here quoted; and those issued under decree of October 27, 1919 contain about 51% less silver. Gold____________ Peso .9733 Currency: Government paper and silver. .4653 Law establishing Conversion office fixes ratio CusLa Rica —----------- —-— Gold_________________ Colon___________ colons=$l U. 8. 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 is legal tender for 97i piasters. Gold......................... Kroon .2680 Markka_____________ .0252 Gold and silver— Franc________________ .1930 Member Latin Union. .2382 Gold_____ ____________ Reichsmark_______ 4.8665 Gold_________________ Pound sterling_____ Gold and silver____ Drachma............. ......... .1930 Member Latin Union. 1.0000 Gold-—............. .............. Quetzal____________ Gourde______________ ttnlri .2000 Currency: National bank notes redeemable on emend in American dollars. LemDira____________ .5000 Onlrl __________ Penen .1749 V The British sovereign and half sovereign are legs Sovereign. . ... 4.8665 { tender in India at 10 rupees per sovereign: actual (Gold Rupee .1888 ( exchange rates approximate 18 pence (36 J cents) to the rupee. Piaste _____________ .4290 Onlrl Lira_________________ .1930 Member Latin Union. Onlrl Yen__________________ .4985 Onlrl Lat.......... .............. ........... .1930 Dollar 1.0000 Currency: Depreciated silver token coins. Customs duties are collected in gold. Gold Litas...... .1000 Currency: Notes of the bank of Lithuania, not now Onlrl .4985 convertible. .4020 Gold Onlrl Dollar 1.0000 Onlrl 1.0000 Cordoba___ ____ .2680 Gold Onlrl Balboa_______________ 1.0000 .9648 Gold Currency: Depreciated Paraguayan paper currency, .0731 f Currency: Silver circulating above its metallic value. < Gold coin is a commodity only, normally worth ttnlrl 4.8665 l double the silver. Gold Peso .5000 Onld .1930 Gold Escudo 1.0805 Onlrl .1930 Currency: Inconvertible paper. .5146 Gold Onld .5000 Pre-war unit. .3709 Gold . .1930 Valuation is for gold peseta: currency is notes of the Spain____________________________ Gold_______ ___ Dollar .................. .5678 bank of Spain. Onld Krona .2680 Gold___ . Franc ___ . . .1930 Member Latin Union. Onld Piaster .0440 (100 piasters equal to the Turkish £.) Onld 1.0342 Currency: Inconvertible paper. Onld________ Rolivnr .1930 Dinar .1930 Yugoslavia_____________________ Gold https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis COUNTRY. 16 TABLE OF CARDINAL NUMBERS AND COMMERCIAL TERMS IN TEN LANGUAGES 00 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.................... Fiinf................... Sechs.................. Sieben................. Acht................... Neun.................. Zehn................... Elf...................... Zwolf.................. Dreizehn............. Vierzehn............. Fiinfzehn........... Sechzehn........... Siebzehn............. Achtzehn........... Neunzehn........... Zwanzig............ Ein und zwanzig. Dreiszig............. Vierzig............... Ftinfzig............... 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................... Dieei.................. Undici................. Dodiei................. Tredici............. Quattordici........ Quindici............. Sedici................. Diciassette......... Diciotto............. Diciannove . Venti.................. Venti’uno........... Trenta ............... Quaranta........... Cinquanta......... Um............. ... Dois................... Tres ... .... Quatro Cinco... Seis................. Sete..................... Oit.o.................... Nove................... Dez . Onze............. Doze. . . Treze . . . Quatorze......... Quinze............. Dezeseis........... Dezessete........... Dezoit.o............... Dezeneve . Vint.e................. Vinte um........... Trinta......... Quarenta........... Cincoenta ......... 60 Sixty................... Soixante............. Sechzig............... Sesenta............... 70 Seventy ............. Soixante-dix .... Siebenzig........... Setenta............... 80 90 100 1000 Eighty ............... Ninety............... Hundred............. Thousand........... Day.................... Week.................. Month............... Year................... On demand........ Quatre-vingt.... Quatre-vingt-dix. Cent................... Mille................... Jour..................... Semaine............. Mois................... Annee................. A presentation. . At sight............. A vue................. After sight......... A jours de vue .. After date......... A jours de date.. Pay to the order. Payez a 1’ordre.. I promise to pay. Je payerai.......... With interest.... Avec interete.. .. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Achtzig............... Neunzig............. Hundert............. Tausend............. Tag..................... Woche............... Monat................ Jahr.................... Nach Sicht, or bei Vorzeigung. Auf Sicht........... Nach Sicht......... Nach Dato, or nach Heute. Fur mich, or uns an anweisung. Werde ich, or werdenwirbezahlen Mit Zinsen. Ochenta ............. Noventa............. Cien................... Mil..................... Dia..................... Semana............... Mes..................... Ano..................... A presentacion .. DUTCH. RUSSIAN. DANISH. Odun................. Dha.. Tza............ Tsehetire......... Piat....... Se.hest................. Sem. . . . Votem................ Deviat............. Desat,................. Odinnatzat...... Devenzat,........... Trenazat......... Cheterinazat,. . . . Paznatzat........... Sehesnadzat.. . Semnat.zat......... Vnserrm atzat. En....................... To...................... Tre..................... Fire..................... Fem.................... Sex . Syu.... Otte.................... Ni....................... Ti......... Ell eve................. Tolv .... Tretten. . . Fjorten............... Femten............... Sext.en................. Sytten................ At.ten................. Nitten......... Dvat.zat............. Tyve................. Dvatzat-odnar . En og Tyve........ Trudzat..... Tredive............... Sorok ............... Fyrretyve........... Piat,desat,. Halvtredsindstyve................ Tredsindstyve. . . Sessanta............. Sessenta............. Zestig................. Sehest,desat, Settanta............. Setenta............... Zeventig............. Semdesat. . . Halvfjerdsindstyve. Ottanta ............. Oitenta............... Taehtig............... Vosemdesat. . . . Firsindstyve Novanta............. Noventa............. Negentig........... Devianosto . Cento............. ... Cem................... Honderd............. Sto.................... Hundrede. . . . Tusinde .... Mille................... Mil..................... Duizend............. Tizatz.......... Dage................. Giorno............... Dia..................... Dag..................... Den................. Tiger ................. Settimana........ Semana............... Week.................. Nedela......... Mese................... Mez.................... Maanden........... Mesatz............... Maaned............. Anno.................. Anno................ Jaar.................... God.................... Aar..................... A presentazione. A presentacao. .. Op vertoon........ Po bziskam........ Paa anfordring.. Een. Twee Drie.. Vier.. Vyf... Zes.................... Zeven ................. Acht................... Negen................. Tien . . Elf......... .... Twaalf............... Dertien. Veertien............. Vyftien............... Zestien............. Zeventien........... Achtien............. Negentien . . . Twintig............. Enen Twintig. . . Dertig................. Veer tig............... Vyftig................. A la vista........... A vista............... A vista ............. Op sight a vista. Po prediavieni... A vista........ A. .dias vista.... Dopo vista .... A . dias vista Dagen na zigt... Po prediavieni. Efter Sigt. A.. dias fecha. .. Dopo dato......... A.. dias data.... Dagen na dato.. Gato................... Efter dato.. SWEDISH. En....................... Tv&..................... Tre..................... Fyra................... Fem..................... Sex...................... Sju....................... Atta.................... Nio...................... Tio...................... Elfva................... Tolf..................... Tretton............... Fj orton............... Femton............... Sexton................. Sjutton............... Aderton............... Nitton................. Tjugu................... Tjuguen............... Trettio................. Fyrtio................. Femtio................. Sextio.................. Sjuttio................. O Attio................... Nittio.................. Hundra............... Tusen.................. Dag..................... Vecka.................. Manad................. O Ar........................ Pa anfordring.... Vid sigt............... Efter sigt............. Fr&n dato........... A la orden......... Pagate al l'ordine Pagase a ordem.. Voor my aan de Nlat it order.... Behag at be tale Behagar att betaOrder. til odre. la till ordre. Pagare............... Paghero............. Pagarei............... Ik neem aan te Ia obetschai....... Jeg forpligter mig Jag forpligtar mig betalan. at betafe. att betala. Con interes........ Con interesse.... Com intereses... Met interest.... Is prozentamu... Med rente......... Med rftnta........... 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-GRAC E STATES ANID TERRITORIES. Legal Rate Rate of by interest Contract. Notes and Acceptances Due on Half Days. Holi days. Are payable Per ct. Per cent. and protestable the day— Alabama.......... ................... Alaska_________ ______ Arizona__________ _ Arkansas___________________ California__________ _ _ Colorado___________________ ____ ______ Connecticut. - Delaware__________ ___ ____ _____________ ... District of Columbia ____ Florida.......................... ..... ........................................ Georgia_________ ____ ____ ___ _____ ________ Hawaii____ .___ ______ Idaho___________________ ________ _____ ___ Illinois.......... .......... ................. ......... .......................... Indiana _ _ ____ Iowa.......... ....... .................. ....................................... Kansas.......... ....................... ........................................ Kentucky_______________ ___ Louisiana ___________________ Maine— ___ ___ Maryland.. ............. .................. ............................. Massachusetts............................................................. Michigan............ -.............. .......................................... Minnesota __ Mississimn . — - ___ , __ Missouri___________________________________ Montana________________ ____ ______________ Nebraska_____________________ _________ ___ Nevada_______________________________ ____ New Hampshire____ __________ ___ __________ New Jersey_____ ____________________________ New Mexico___ _______________ ____________ New York.......... ................. .................... ................... North Carolina..—..................................................... North Dakota....... _......... ........._.................................. Ohio............................. ......... ...................................... Oklahoma.............................................................. Oregon ........................................................................ Pennsylvania..................... .............................. Philippine Islands............... .............................. Porto Rico.— _____ . Rhode Island............................................ ................... South Carolina....................................... ........... South Dakota. „___ _____ _____ Tennessee..... ....... ......................... Texas..................... ..... ......................................... Utah.................................................................. Vermont........................................... .......... Virginia.......................... ................................ Washington____________________ West Virginia............................................. Wisconsin......................................................... Wyoming.................................. ................................... Alberta__________________________ . British Columbia ............... ......... ......... Manitoba____________________ ___ New Brunswick_______________ __ Nova Scotia.................................................................. Ontario............................................ ............................ Quebec.................................................................... Saskatchewan .............................................................. 8 8 6 6 7 8 6 6 6 8 7 8 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 6 7 7 6 6 8 6 6 0 6 6 7 6 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 8 12 10 10 See® Any ratet 12 6 8 10 8 12 10 7 8 8 10 6 8 Any rate 6 Any rate! 7 8 8 8 10 10 12 Any rate 6 12 6t 6 9 8 10 10 6 ♦ 12 Any rate 8 10 6 10 1 12 ! 8 1 ■ 6 12 1 8 10 10 After After After After After After After After After After After After After After After After After After After After After Afterl After After After After After After After After After After After After After After After After After After After After After After After Afterl After After After After After After After After i Anv rate After After After After * After After After* After After After After After After After After After After After Afterl After After Afterll After After After After After After After After — After After After After After After After After After After _____ After After After After — After -f- Any rate After -------Any rate After —......... Any rate After — Any rate After *-------------- STATUTES OF LIMITATIONS 1 1 Holidays falling on Sunday are observed the day— After Before 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 Notes. Bills. Notes and Open Judg Written ments. AcCon Sight counts. tracts Drafts. 1 Sealed instru ments wit nessed. No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace Nograce No grace No grace Nograce No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace Nograce No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace Nograce No grace No grace No grace Grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace Grace No grace No grace No grace Nograce No grace No grace No grace No grace No grace Grace No grace No grace Nograce No grace No grace ■ No grace Nograce Grace Grace Grace Grace Grace Grace Grace i Grace Grace Grace Grace Grace Grace l Grace Grace Years. Years. Years. Years. 3 6 3 3 4 6 6 3 3 3 4 6 6 6 5 4 6 6 S 3 5 6 20 10 5 3-1011 10 10 6 5 4 5 6 5 3 2-5 3 8 3 6 6 6 3 5 6 4 4 6 6 4 6 3 « 6 3 6 6 6 5 10 10 10 5 5-16 5-10 6-20 3-12 6 6 6 6 10 8 5 6 6 6 6 6 3 6 15 « 20 20 20 5 15 10 20 12 201 8-10 10 7 10 10 5-101 6 20 20 7 20 10 10 26X 1-5 10 20 101 6 6 6 6 2 4 6 3 3 5 6 8 8 6 5 6 6 10 6 « 6 6 4 6 6-14 5 6 10 6 10 8 6 6 6 5 6 6 6 6 6 5 6 6 4 a 8-201 201 10 12 20 7 20 20 10-20 10 10 8 8 10 6 10 10-20 5-10 12 20 10 20 20 20 30 12 3-201 17 1 20 12 20 20 a 10 20 10 5 16 10 20 12 20 6 6 10 8 5 8 20 16 ( 20 10 6 15 5 10 20 10 20 6-20 201 4 6 « 10 10 10-20 10 20 20 10 20 20 20 5-30 20* * 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 $6000 and over. 1 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. t 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. * Debts charged on land although by sealed instruments are outlawed in twelve years. x Becomes dormant five (5) years after the last execution is issued and may be revived within 21 years after becoming dormant. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 18 FEDERAL RESERVE BANKS FEDERAL FARM LOAN BANKS JOINT STOCK LAND BANKS https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis CLEARING HOUSES A LL THE BANKER needs to "*■ know about their loca tions, territories and personnel is published in condensed form in this Directory. This infor mation is painstakingly accu rate and absolutely up to date. Use it. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Bonded Attorneys Insure Your Collections Nature of Bond Jd/rectoryL The Publishers of this Directory THE WORLD OVER What Forwarders say Des Moines, Iowa. I And that your representatives, as a rule, are attorneys of the highest order. Bainbridge, Ga. n connection with your bonded we feel sure if you will continue your effort it will, in the course of a very short time, be among the leading lists of the country Charleston, S. C. We are using your list whenever possible. We believe it to be an excellent medium. Bellingham, Wash. I want to write you to state that I think you are going at this matter in the right spirit and that ultimately Rand McNally’s should be one of the very best forwarding lists we have. Deadwood, S. D. Of course what the. forwarder, whether he has much or little business wants, is service, and we are confident that your list contains the names of aggressive and Qualified attorneys. Gulfport, Miss. “I am using altogether for forwarding business your list. I have found it of great value to our office, and And that persons you recommend are prompt, efflcient and reliable. I believe you have the best proposition as a business getter for the Commercial Attorney on the market and I believe you are going to develop it into the best attorneys list. Hillsboro. Texas I want to assure you of my appreciation of your untiring efforts to make the Rand McNally Attorneys list one of the most popular and reliable lists in the country. Knoxville, Tenn. We fully appreciate the value of your work and shall be pleased to send affair share of our business through your attorneys. Louisville, Ky. We invariably use Rand McNally’s Bonded List. In our judgment it ' is superior to any list of attorneys our long experience has! https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis possession American Company of New York on all Attorneys whose names appear in the Attorney List under the heading oreign rneys made to them as Trustee Forwarders Business to Bonded Attorneys in the Rand M^N List of Attorneys, Amount of Bond Each Attorney in this List excepting under heading Foreign Attorneys1 bonded sum of two thousand dollars, Coupons must be used rwar Attorneys must be accompanied the coupon provided for opposite beginning the notification coupon must be properly forwarded to the Publishers Chicago within thirty the forwarding of the claim Attorney, Additional books coupons furnished upon request free of Coupons Inserted in Bankers Directory Clients Each Attorney in our List (excepting those listed under heading “Foreign Attorneys”) by The American Surety of two thousand York fo Any one having business Attorney amount Attorney, may upon application in writing have the Attorney’s bond in have caused bond to be taken a Surety Company, because, on account nature of its business it is in a better position than are the Publishers protect subscribers. The American Company of New York (Capital and Surpl us over 3><i been chosen because exceptional strength and its prompt- aims in meeting The Rand McNally Bankers DirectBanke Attorneys has scription subscribers represent more tion. capital than those combined our banks. our commercial houses together community o to build mutual benefit bscribers these bonded lawyers when possible, Business lawyers s hould operate with In using our List subscribe protected by the the Attorneys, character Rand M?Nally & Company NEW YORK 536 S. Clark Madison Avenue Reserve* Required t. be held by members in Federal Reserve Bank Banks Not in Reserve or Central Reserve City Reserve City Banks Central Reserve City Banks 7% of Demand Deposits 3% of Time Deposits 10% of Demand Deposits 3% of Tim. Deposits 13% of Demand Deposits 3% of Time Deposits Central Reserve Cities 2. NEW YORK CITY .... 7. CHICAGO Reserve Cities Albany, N. Y. Atlanta, Ga. Baltimore, Md. Birmingham, Ala. Boston, Mass. Brooklyn, N. Y. Br.2. Buffalo, N. Y. Cedar Rapids, Iowa Cincinnati, O. Cleveland, O. Columbus, O. 11. Dallas, Texas Br.10. Denver, Colo. Des Moines, Iowa Detroit, Mich. Dubuque, Iowa El Paso, Texas Fort Worth, Texas Galveston, Texas Grand Rapids, Mich. Br.9. Helena, Mont. Br.ll. Houston, Texas Indianapolis, Ind. Br.6. Jacksonville, Fla. Kansas City, Kan. 10. Kansas City, Mo. Lincoln, Neb. Br.8. Little Rock, Ark. Br.12. Los Angeles, Cal. Br.8. Louisville, Ky. Br.8. 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. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 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, 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-! 1927) ARTHUR M. HEARD, 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 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 20 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 FEDERAL RESERVE BANK INFORMATION I 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 377; State Banks 39. DIRECTORS CLASS A:—ALFRED L. RIPLEY (1929), Boston; F. S. CHAMBERLAIN (1928), New Britain, Conn.; EDWARD S. KENNARD (1927), Rumford, Maine. CLASS B:—ALBERT C. BOWMAN (1928), Springfield, Vermont; PHILIP R. ALLEN (1929), East Walpole, Mass. C. G. WASHBURN (1927), Worcester, Mass. CLASS C: FREDERIC H. CURTISS (1929), Boston, Chairman of Board and Federal Reserve Agent; CHARLES H. MANCHESTER (1928), Providence, R. I.; ALLEN HOLLIS (1927), Concord, N. H., Deputy Chairman. AR riITJR M. HEARD, Manchester, N. H., 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 Gold and gold certificates.............................. $ 32,749,000 Gold settlement fund, F. R. Board.............. 31,812,000 Gold with Federal Reserve Agents............... 128,814,000 Gold redemption fund..................................... 6,605,000 Reserves Other than Gold............................ 18,358,000 Capital paid in.........................................................................$ 8,800,000 Surplus....................................................................................... 17,606,000 Government deposits............................................................... 1,839,000 Due to members—reserve account....................................... 148,805,000 Foreign Bank........................................................................... 283,000 Other deposits......................................................................... 92,000 Total deposits.......................................$151,019,000 Federal Reserve Dotes in actual circulation........................ 128,840,000 Deferred availability items................................................... 57,403,000 All other liabilities................................................ 285,000 TOTAL LIABILITIES https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis $363,953,000 Total reserve............................................ $218,33S,000 Nonreserve cash............................................. Bills discounted—secured by Government obligations.................................................... Bills discounted—all others........................... Bills bought in open market.......................... U. S. Bonds.................................................... U. S. TreasuryNotes..................................... U. S. certificates ofindebtedness................... Bank premises................................................. Uncollected items.......................................... All other resources........................................... 11,862,000 14,426,000 38,114,000 681,000 2,422,000 6,546,000 3,946,000 59,748,000 73,000 TOTAL RESOURCES......................... 21 7,797,000 $363,953,000 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, Hudson, Hunterdon, Middlesex, Monmouth, Morris, Passaic, Somerset, Sussex, Union, and Warren and the County of Fairfield Connecticut. Membership: National Banks 757; State Banks 58; Trust Companies 106. Total 921. DIRECTORS Term Expires Dec. SI Sl j O j 1 Jackson E. Reynolds, New York City 1928 A 2 Robert H. Them an, Ithaca, N. Y. 1929 A 3 Delmer Runkle, A •Q <0 o B President, First National Bank President, The Tompkins National Bank B County C C 1927 Hoosick Falls, N. Y. President, Peoples National Bank Term Expires Dec. SI P, *5 O 1929 2 Theodore F. Whitmarsh, New York City President, Francis H. Leggett & Co., 3 Samuel W. Reyburn, New York City President Lord & Taylor Clarence M. Woolley, Greenwich, Conn. Chairman, American Radiator Co. Owen D. Young, New York City Deputy Chairman Chairman, General Electric Company 1927 1927 1929 MEMBER FEDERAL ADVISORY COUNCIL Chairman National Bank of Commerce in New I ork. James S. Alexander. OFFICERS GENERAL OFFICERS Benj. Strong, Governor George L. Harrison, Deputy Governor Edwin R. Kenzel, Deputy Governor J. Herbert Case, Deputy Governor Louis F. Sailer, Deputy Governor L. Randolph Mason, General Counsel Jesse Holladay Philbin, Secretary Edward L. Dodge, Arthur Ray W. Gilbart, M. Gidney, Senior Officers Laurence H. Hendricks, Controller of Cash and Controller of Collections Controller of Loans Charles H. Cob, Jay E. Crane, Edwin C. 1. Ward Waters, Manager, Cash Department French, W. Randolph Leslie R. Rounds, Junior Officers Walter B. Matteson, Robert M. O’Hara, Manager, Check Department Jambs M. Rice, Manager, Foreign Department and Assistant Secretary Stephen S. Vansant, Controller of Fiscal Agency Func tions Controller of Administration Controller of Accounts J. Wilson Jones, Manager, AdministrationDepartment Dudley H Barrows, and Ass’t. Gen. Counsel General Auditor Manager, Securities Department Manager, Bill Department Manager Accounting Department Manager, Safekeeping Department Manager, Collection Department FEDERAL RESERVE AGENT ........................................ Federal Reserve Agent Burgess, Assistant Federal Reserve Agent Carl Snyder, General Statistician Herbert S. Downs, Manager, Bank Relations Dept. BUFFALO BRANCH Directors Elliott C. McDougal, W Crandall, , „ ,, _T v Chairman, Marine Trust Company, Buffalo President, National Bank of Westfield, Westfield, N. i. Fred B. Cooley, Arthur Hough, Chairman President, New York Car Wheel Co., Buffalo President, Wiard Plow Company, Batavia, N. Y. Harry T. Ramsdell, John A. Kloepfer, Chairman, Mfrs. and Traders Trust Co., Buffalo President, Liberty Bank of Buffalo Walter W. Schneckenburger, Managing Director Frank Officers Walter W. Schneckenburger, Halsey W. Snow, Jr., Cashier Managing Director Clifford L. Blakeslee. Assistant Cashier Elmer L. Theobald, Assistant Cashier RESOURCES Gold and eold certificates............................ $500,023,000 Gold settlement fund F. R. Board................ 152,167,000 Gold with Federal Reserve Agents.............. 394,075,000 Gold redemption fund.................................... 12,666,000 Reserves other than Gold.............................. ‘33,407,000 LIABILITIES Capita) paid in......................................................................... $ 37,059,000 Surplus....................................................................................... 61.614,000 Government deposits............................................................... 13,170,000 Due to members—reserve account....................................... 845,227,000 Foreign Bank........................................................................... 2,141,000 Other deposits ......................................................................... 9,885,000 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.................. Due from Foreign banks.............................. Bank premises.................................................. Uncollected items........................................... AU other resources.......................................... Total deposits.......................................... $870,423,000 Federal Reserve notes in actual circulation........................ 406,771,000 Deferred availability items.................................................... 140,432,000 All other liabilities................................................................... TOTAL LIABILITIES https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 2,244,000 TOTAL RESOURCES $1,518,543,000 22 $1,092,338,000 23,149,000 61,553,000 15,190,000 92,706.000 2,156,000 12,557,000 39,405,000 657,000 16,276.000 160,576.000 1,980,000 $1.518,.543.000 FEDERAL RESERVE BANK INFORMATION DISTRICT No. 3 Bank Located at Philadelphia. (Transit Number 3-4) (925 Chestnut Street) PISTriCT—Delaware, the following counties of New Jersey: Atlantic, Burlington, Camden, ’ G ™fes™r’ J^jce£ °£ean’ a jdr,Sjiemj and aU Pennsylvania east of western boundary of following counties. McKean, Elk, Clearfield, Cambria, and Bedford. Membership: National Banks 679; State Banks 82. DIRECTORS C.OTSGROW^SX'^hnrto™;^929’’ Phil“de!',Ma’ FRANCIS DOUGLAS (1927), Wilkes Barre, Pa.; JOHN K HAOTmTffiwf Haddimfield NN^J28)’ Philadelphia; ARTHUR • SEWALL (1929), Philadelphia; CHARLES w o 9;~7RRRI"9?^9, R‘ ARSTiN (1929), Philadelphia, Chairman of Board; Bridgeville, Del.; CHAS. C. HARRISON (1927), Philadelphia.. HARRY L. CANNON (1928) UV^’ OFFICERS A^STAMT°KfiTT^«ra0rWWITLL^AA vr§C- A- McILHENNY, Cashier and Secretary. S REARLNT CASHIERS:—W- J DAVIS, JAMES M. TOY, R. M. MILLER, Jr., F. W. LABOLD and RICHARD L. AUSTIN, Chairman and Federal Reserve Agent; ARTHUR E. POST, Assistant Federal Reserve Agent; ERNEST C. HILL, Assistant Federal Reserve Agent. LEVI L, RUE, Philadelphia, Member Federal Advisory Council; WM. G. McCREEDY, Comptroller. LIABILITIES RESOURCES Capitol paid in..........................................................................$ 12,584,000 8 urplufi tend.............................................................................. Govert,mu»t deposits............................................................... Due to members—reserve account................................... 21,267,000 1,614,000 140,291,000 Foreign bank........................................................... 362,000 Other deposits..................................................................... 474,000 Total deposits...............................................$142,741,000 Federal Reserve notes in actual circulation.................... 117,331,000 Deferred availability items................................................ 54,128,000 All other liabilities........................................................... TOTAL LIABILITIES Gold coin and certificates.............................. $ 28,264,000 Gold settlement lund, F. R. Board.............. 42,487,000 Gold with Federal Reserve Agents............... 112,819,000 Gold redemption fund..................................... 12,507,000 Reserves Other than Gold............................. 7,543,000 262,000 Total $203,620,000 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............................................. Bank premises.................................................. Uncollected items........................................... All other resources........................................... TOTAL RESOURCES $348,313,000 DISTRICT No. 4—Bank Located at Cleveland. 1,922,000 22,434,000 13,765,000 23,996,000 659,000 15,543,000 3,726,000 2,000,000 1,709,000 58,594,000 345,000 $348,313,000 (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 746; State Banks 112. DIRECTORS , A:—^ROBERT WARDROP (1929), Pittsburgh; CHESS LAMBERTON (1928), Franklin, Pa.; O. N. SAMS (1927), Hillsboro, Ohio. CLASS B:—R. P. WRIGHT (1928), Erie, Pa.; JOHN STAMBAUGH (1927), Youngstown, Ohio; G. D. CRABBS (1929), Lockwood. Ohio. GLASS C:—GEORGE DE CAMP (1929), Cleveland, Chairman of Board; L. B. WILLIAMS (1928), Cleveland, Ohio, Deputy Chairman of Board; W. W. KNIGHT (1927), Toledo, Ohio. GEQ. A. COULTON, Cleveland, Ohio, Member Federal Advisory Council. OFFICERS Georg® De Camp, Chairman of Board and Federal Reserve E. R. Fancher, Governor Agent M. J. Fleming, Deputy Governor Wm. H. Fletcher, Assistant Federal Reserve Agent and F. J. Zurlinden, Deputy Governor Manager, Department of Examination H. F. Strater, Cashier and Secretary J. B. Anderson, Assistant Federal Reserve Agent and W. F. Taylor, Asst. Cashier Manager Statistical Department. C. W. Arnold, Asst. Cashier G. A. Stephenson, Manager Bank Relations Depart G. H. Wagner, Asst. Cashier ment D. B. Clouser, Asst. Cashier f. V. Grayson, Auditor C. L. Bickford, Asst. Cashier CINCINNATI BRANCH. (Transit Number 13-43) (Fourth and Walnut) P.J.FAULKNER, Assistant Federal Reserve Agent; C. F. McCOMBS, Managing Director; B. J. LAZAR, Cashier; JOHN P. H. BREWSTER, Assistant Cashier; H. N. OTT, Assistant Cashier. • DIRECTORS FRED A GEIER, CHAS. W. DUPUIS, JOHN OMWAKE, B. H. KROGER, and C. F. McCOMBS, Cincinnati; E. S. LEE, Covington, Ky.; GEO. M. VERITY, Middletown, O. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org 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) i . > ’ ' ' • . • t- 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, A. L. HUMPHREY, A. E. BRAUN, AND J. C. NEVIN, Pittsburgh; J. R. EISAMAN, Greensburg, Pa.; JOSEPH R. NAYLOR, Wheeling, W. Va. RESOURCES Gold coin and certificates.............................. $ 51,207,000 Gold settlement fund...................................... 75,100,000 Gold with Federal Reserve Agents............... 165,874,000 Gold redemption fund..................................... ®’695.000 Reserves other than Gold.............................. 11,310,000 LIABILITIES Capital paid in ....................................................................... * 13,762,000 Surplua fund.............................................................................. 23,746,000 Government deposits.,............... ..............,......................... 597,000 Du* to members—reserve account....................................... 208,527,000 Foreign Bank.................................................................. 400,000 AH other deposits.................. 891,000 Total Deposits........ i............................$210,415,000 federal Reserve notes in actual circulation........................ 195,959,000 Deferred availability items..................................................... 56,516,000 All other liabilities................................................................... 1,081,000 $309,086,000 Total reserve............................................ TOTAL LIABILITIES..................................................$501,479,000 4,315,000 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 ................ Bank premises.................................................. Uncollected items........................................... All other resources........................................... 28,560,000 25,079,000 28,965,000 1,367,000 18,683,000 15,283,000 7,119,000 62,002,000 TOTAL RESOURCES.......................... $501,479,000 DISTRICT No. 5 -Bank Located at Richmond. 1,020,000 (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 527; State Banks CLASS A:—L. E. JOHNSON (1929), Alderson, W. Va.; CHAS. E. RIEMAN (1927), Baltimore, Md.; JAMES C. BRASWELL (1928), Rocky Mount, N. C. ............ ^ n CLASS B:—EDMUND STRUDWICK (1927), Richmond; EDWIN C. GRAHAM (19~8), Washington, D. ., DACLA8S C^WlW1HOXTONVa929),CEichmond, Chairman oj 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 GFORGEJ SEAY Governor' riff AS A. PEPLE, Deputy Governor; R. H BROADDUS, Deputy Governor; J.S. WALDEN, *..Q52£5EfcloRbET0KE^EE^Cashier; klfflT S. went • JOHN T. GARRETT, Manager, Bank Relations Department; HUGH LEACH, Auditor, W. W. DlLLAKIVAs s Cashier; EDWARD WALLER, Jr., Assistant Cashier; GEORGE S. SLOAN, Ass^on Cashier^ WALLACE, Counsel; W. W. HOXTON, Chairman of the Board and Federal Reserve Agent, J. G. IKY, 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. HA\S, Assistant Cashier; JOHN R. CUPiT, Assistant Cashier. ' DIRECTORS A TT nnniFY Manaaina Director• H. B. WILCOX, C. G. OSBURN, JOHN G. ROUSE, and W. H. MATTHAU Baltimore; EDMUND P. COHILL, Hancock; LEVI B. PHILLIPS, Cambridge. LIABILITIES Capital paid in......................................................................... * 6,108,000 Surplus....................................................................................... 12,108,000 Government deposit*...................... v..................................... 1,926,000 Due to members—reserve account....................................... 71,122,000 Foreign Bank........................................................................... 196,000 All other deposits..................................................................... 112,000 RESOURCES Gold and gold certificates.............................. $ l?»89j(.606 Gold settlement fund, F. R. Board.............. 21,092,000 Gold with Federal Reserve Agents............... Gold redemption fund..................................... 00°,00U Reserves other than Gold............................. 11,719,000 Total deposits.......................................$ 73,356,000 Federal Reserve notes in actual circulation......................... 75,346,000 Deferred availability items..................................................... 48,783,000 All other liabilities................................................................... 720,000 TOTAL LIABILITIES.................................................. $216,511,000 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.......................... * 113,212,000 7,342,000 U. S. Treasury Notes................................... U. S. Certificates of indebtedness.............. 1.436,000 4.344,000 Uncollected items......................................... All other resources...................................... .. • j2,621.000 TOTAL RESOURCES.......................... $216,511,000 6,746,000 16,059,000 1 VotnnoA 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.; E. C. MELVIN (1928), Selma, Ala.; G. G. WARE (1929),' Leesburg, Fla. CLASS B —LEON C. SIMON (1929), New Orleans, La.; J. A. McCRARY (1927), Decatur, Ga.; W. H. HARTFORD >1928), Nashville, Tenn. CLASS C;—OSCAR NEWTON 0929), 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, CREED TAYLOR, Deputy Governor: M. W. BELL. Cashier; R. A. SIMS, H. F. CONNIFF, J. B. TUTWILER, V. K. BOWMAN, Assistant Cashiers; OSCAR NEWTON, Chairman of the Board and Federal Reserve Agent; WARD ALBERTSON, Assistant Federal Reserve Agent and Secretary of the Board of Directors; V . 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 MARCUS WALKER, Managing Director; W. II BLACK, Assistant Manager; J. A. WALKER, Cashier; F. C. VASTERLING, 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 L. C. EDWARDS, Chairman, Tampa, Fla.; FULTON SAUSSEY, GEORGE R. DeSAUSSURE, EDW. W. LANE, C. P. KENDALL, JOHN C. COOPER, Jacksonville, Fla.; G. G. WARE, Leesburg, Fla. OFFICERS GEORGE R. DeSAUSSURE, Managing Director; W. S. McLARIN, Jr., Cashier; GEO. J. WHITE, Assistant Cashier. 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) J. H. BOWDEN, Manager; JAS. A. GOETHE, Assistant Manager. > HAVANA AGENCY L. L. MAGRUDER, Manager; H. C. FRAZER, Assistant Manager. MEMBER FEDERAL ADVISORY COUNCIL P. D. HOUSTON, Nashville, Tenn. LIABILITIES Capital paid in............................................... RESOURCES .................. $ 5,020,000 iurplia............................................................. .................. 9,632,000 Government deposits..................................... .................. 2,531,000 Due to members—reserve account............. .................. 68,879,000 Foreign banks................................................. ................... 2,531,000 All other deposits........................................... ................... 90,000 Total deposits................................................. 871,654,000 Federal Reserve notes in actual circulation .................. 157,538,000 Deferred availability items........................... .................. 24,048,000 All other liabilities......................................... .................. 420,000 TOTAL LIABILITIES https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Gold and gold certificates...................... . .8 4,451,000 Gold settlement fund, F. R. Board.............. 25,860,000 Gold with Federal Reserve Agents............... 144,336,000 Gold redemption fund..................................... 2,000,000 Reserve other than Gold................................ 12,297,000 Total reserve............................................ Non-reserve caBh......................................... Bills discounted—secured by Government obligations.................................................... Bills discounted—all other............................ Bills bought in open market.......................... U. S. bonds...................................... ................ LT. S. Treasury notes.................................... U. S. certificates of indebtedness................ Bank premises............... .................................. Uncollected items.......................................... Other resources............................................... 8268,312,000 TOTAL RESOURCES 25 8188,944,000 4,665,000 466,000 27,956,000 15,380,000 253,000 1,557,000 , 2,000 2 866,000 25,496,000 747,000 8268,312,000 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 counties; all of tiie southern peninsula of Michigan, viz.: that part east of Lake Michigan; all that part of Illinois located north 01 a line farming 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 1033; State Banks 324. DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS Class A—Directors ELBERT L. JOHNSON. Waterloo, Iowa (1929) CHARLES H. McNIDER. Mason City, Iowa (1928) GEORGE M. REYNOLDS, Chicago, Ill. (1927) Loans and Credits KENT C. CHILDS, Controller, Loans and Credits ALLEN R. LeROY, Manager, Loans EUGENE A. DELANEY, Manager, Credit Department JOSEPH C. CALLAHAN, Manager, Member Bank Aocounts Department. Class B—Directors ROBERT MUELLER, Decatur Ill, (1929) STANFORD T. CRAPO, Detroit, Mich. (1928) AUGUST H. VOGEL. Milwaukee, Wis. (1927) Investments ALBA W. DAZEY, Manager, Investment Department Class C—Directors JAMES SIMPSON, Chicago, Ill. (1929) FRANK C. BALL, Muncie, Ind. (1928) WILLIAM A. HEATH, Evanston, Ill. (1927) Cash and Custodies OTTO J. NETTERSTROM, Controller, Cash and Cttatodies JESSE G. ROBERTS, Manager, Cash Department ROBERT E. COULTER, Manager, Cash Custody Dept. FRED BATEMAN, Manager, Securities Department, Officers WILLIAM A. HEATH, Chairman and Federal Reserve Agent JAMES SIMPSON. Deputy Chairman WILLIAM H. WHITE, Assistant Federal Reserve Agent and Manager, Examinations. 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 Advisory Council Collections WILLIAM C. BACHMAN, Controller, Collections IRVING FISCHER, Manager, Check Dept. LOUIS G. PAVEY, Manager, Collection Department Administration JAMES H. DILLARD,'Controller, Administration ROBERT J. HARGREAVES, Manager, Personnel De partment LOUIS G. MEYER, Manager, Service Department FRANK A. LINDSTEN, Manager, Disbursing Dept. Banking Officials JAMES B. McDOUGAL, Governor JOHN H. BLAIR, Deputy Governor CHARLES R. MeKAY, Deputy Governor Fiscal Agency DON A. JONES, Controller, Fiscal Agency Function.! DETROIT BRANCH. (Transit No. 9-29) (128 W. Congress St.) Directors GEORGE B MORLEY—(1927) N. P. HULL—(1929) WILLIAM J. GRAY—(1928) JAMES INGLIS—(1928) DAVID McMORRAN—(1927)JOHN W. STALEY(1929) WILLIAM R. CATION, Managing Director Officers JOHN G. BASKIN, Asst. Federal Reserve Agent FLOYD L. BOWEN, Assistant Auditor WILLIAM R. CATION, Manager JOHN B. DEW, Cashier HARLAN J. CHALFONT, Assistant Cashier GEORGE T. JARVIS, Assistant Cashier HENRY M. BUTZEL, Assistant Counsel RESOURCES LIABILITIES Capital paid in......................................................................... * 16,856,000 Surplus....................................................................................... 31.881,000 Government deposits............................................................... 4,912,000 Due to members—reserve account....................................... 319,052,000 Gold and gold certificates.............................. $ 59,769,000 Gold settlement fund, F. R. Board.............. 125,152,000 Gold with Federal Reserve Agents.............. 177.689,000 Gold redemption fund.................................... 3,528,000 Reserves other than gold.............................. 27.0S4.000 Foreign bank............................................................................. 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................ Bank premises................................................. Uncolleoted items........................................... All other resources.......................................... 520,000 All other deposits..................................................................... 1,021,000 Total deposits......................................$325,505,000 Federal Reserve notes in actual circulation........................ 211,423,000 Deferred availability items..................................................... 67,734,000 All ether liabilities................................................................... 2,256,000 TOTAL RESOURCES TOTAL LIABILITIES.................................................$655,655,000 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 26 S .195,222,000 8.89S.OOO 44.720,000 12,228,000 40,915,000 21,060,000 6,653.000 [9,888,000 7.842.000 77,520,000 2,700,000 $65(5,655,000 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: 'V»?aVie^ ^adwed> Pay, Lafayette, Johnson, Henry, St. Clair, Cedar, Dade, Lawrence, and Barry; all Illinois t northernJboundaries of the following counties: Adams, Brown, Morgan, McCoupin, Montgomery, Fayette, Effingham, Jasper, and Crawford; all Indiana south of the northern boundaries of the following counties: Sullivan, Greene, OauI*;LCenifCk8SD’ ,?•**’ fejerson’ Switzerland; all Kentucky west of the eastern boundaries of the following counties: GaJlatm, Owen, Franklin, Anderson, Mercer, Boyle, Casey, Russell, and Wayne; all Tennessee west of the eastern boundaries . ,, e 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 496; State Banks 123. DIRECTORS MARTIN U928)^ Salem* ^0NSDALE ^1929>> St- Louis: J- c- UTTERBACK (1927), Paducah, Ky.; JOHN C. PT?SrvS?i<S^Ii9LLA-iiVEtfiS G927)’ St' Louis» WILLIAM B. PLUNKETT (1928), Little Rock, Ark.; LE ROY PERCY (1929), Greenville, Miss. RnTTTTWT? 0000^1’ MARTIN (1927), St. Louis, Chairman of Board and Federal Reserve Agent; JOHN W. BOEHNE (1929), Evansville, Ind., Deputy Chairman; PAUL DILLARD (1928), Memphis, Tenn. BRECKINRIDGE JONES, St. Louis, Mo., Member Federal Advisory Council. OFFICERS pCm^JIN| Chairnum of theBoardand Federal Reserve Agent; C. M. STEWART. Assistant Federal Reserve Gove™°r> QLJN M. ATTEBERY, Deputy Governor; JAMES G. McCONKEY, Secretary and Counsel; £ Twrov?* CaShrA! h HHAJLL.J.W.mNKLEFF, S. F. GILMORE, and F. N. HALL, Assistant Cashiers; E. J. NOVY, General Auditor; E. I. NOWOTNY, L. A. MOORE, A. E. DEBRECHT, Assistant Auditors. < LITTLE ROCK BRANCH. (Transit Number 81-13). A. F. BAILEY, Managing Director; M. H. LONG, Cashier; CLIFFORD WOOD, Assistant Cashier. DIRECTORS SON,' a^d M&RHEAD WRiGHT PBELL’ J°HN M* DAVIS} W* A' HICKS’ HAMP WILLIAMS, STUART WIL- LOUISVILLE BRANCH. (Transit Number 21-59) W. P. KINCHELOE, Managing Director; JOHN T. MOORE, Cashier; EARL R. MUIR, Assistant Cashier. DIRECTORS SWEARINGEN ^’d E^SvOOD*’ EUGENE K H0GE> W- p KINCHELOE, MAX B. NAHM, EMBRY L. MEMPHIS BRANCH. (Transit Number 26-3) W. H, GLASGOW, Managing Director; S. K. BELCHER, Cashier; C. E. MARTIN, Assistant Cashier. DIRECTORS. andMj.^W^ANDEN GLA8G0W’ J- D’ Mc°OWELL, WILLIAM ORGILL, T. K. RIDDICK, R. B. SNOWDEN LIABILITIES RESOURCES Capital paid in......................................................................... $ 5,284,000 Surplus fund.............................................................................. 9,930,000 Government deposits............................................................... 1,261,000 Due to members—reserve account....................................... 79,424,000 Foreign bank............................................................................ 162,000 All other deposits..................................................................... 329,000 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 in open market.......................... U. S. Government Bonds........................... U. S. Treasury Notes.................................... U. S. certificates of indebtedness,.............. Bank premises.................................................. Uncollected items............................................ All other resources........................................... Total deposits.......................................881,176,000 Federal Reserve notes in actual circulation........................ 46,028,000 Deferred availability items..................................................... 32,045,000 All other liabilities................................................................... 770,000 TOTAL LIABILITIES https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis $176,842,000 TOTAL RESOURCES 27 16,339 000 22,866^000 31,836^000 1,238,000 18,025 000 590,304,000 4 Q73 q00 6,518,000 6,586,000 11,306!000 2,705,000 7,455,000 10,605,000 3,957,000 30,916,000 817^000 $175,842,000 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 countie*: 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 752; State Banks 80. 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 (192/), 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; A. R. LARSON, Assistant Cashier; ANDREAS UELAND, Legal Counsel; SIGRUD UELAND, Assistant Legal Counsel; II. P. HOWARD, Custodian of Building. 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; HENRY S1EBEN and R. E. TOWLE, Helena. OFFICERS R. E. TOWLE, Managing Director; H. L. ZIMMERMAN, Cashier; W. A. CUTLER, Assistant Cashier RESOURCES LIABILITIES Capital paid is .......................................................S 3,043,000 - ....................................................... 7,527,000 .. 45,077,000 Gold and cold certificates.............................. * 6,553,000 Gold settlement board. Federal Reserve Board...................................................... 10,54S,000 Gold with Federal Reserve Agents............... 60,429,000 Gold redemption fund.................................... 1,987,000 Reserves other than Gold............................ 3,818,000 1,143,000 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..................................... U. S. certificates of indebtedness.................. Uncollected items............................................ Bank premises................................................. All other resources.......................................... 113,000 160,000 Total deposits...................................... *46,493,000 Federal Reserve notes in actual circulation.......... .. .. 63,986,000 9,594,000 All other liabilities................................. TOTAL LIABILITIES https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 939,000 TOTAL RESOURCES *131,582,000 28 •* 83,335,000 878,000 449,000 3,477,000 11,110,000 7,693,000 2,122,000 6,666,000 10,527,000 2,774,000 2,051,000 *131,582,000 FEDERAL RESERVE BANK INFORMATION DISTRICT No, 10—Bank Located at Kansas City, Mo. (Transit Number 18-4) (10th & Grand Ave.) 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: Valencia, Bernallillo, Santa Fe, San Miguel, Harding and Union. Membership: National Banks 979; State Banks 32. DIRECTORS CLASS A:—E. E. MULLANEY (1929), Hill City, Kan.; FRANK W. SPONABLE (1928), Paola, Kan.; C. C. PARKS (1927), Denver, Colo. CLASS B>-L. E. PHILLIPS (1929), Bartlesville, Okla.; THOS. C. BYRNE (1927), Omaha, Neb.; J. M. BERNARDIN (1928), Kansas City, Mo. CLASS C:—M. L. McCLURE (1929), Kansas City, Chairman of Board; HEBER HORD (1927), Central City, Neb.; Deputy Chairman of Board; WM. L. PETRIKIN, (1928), Denver, Colo. 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; II. G. LEEDY, Council. 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; MERRITT GANO, Denver; J. E. OLSON, Denver; MURDO MACKENZIE, Denver; R. H. DAVIS, Denver; H. W. FARR, Greeley, Colo.; HENRY SWAN, Denver. OMAHA BRANCH (Transit Number 27-12) (1701-5 Dodge St.) L. H. EARHART, Managing Director; G. A. GREGORY, Cashier; WM. PHILLIPS, Assistant Cashier. DIRECTORS WM. DE1S1NG, Omaha; A. H. MARBLE, Cheyenne, Wyo.; L. H. EARHART, Omaha; R. O. MARNELL, Nebraska City; W. E. HARDY, 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; AUSTIN MILLER, Oklahoma City. LIABILITIES RESOURCES Capital paid in......................................................................... $ 4,182,000 Surplus fund............................................................................. Gold and gold certificates.............................$ 7,587,000 Gold settlement fund, F. R. B’d................... 33,3S1,000 Gold with Federal Reserve Agents.............. 59,466,000 Gold redemption fund..................................... 2,603.000 Reserves other than Gold............................... 5,905.000 9,029,000 Government deposits............................ "............................... 936,000 Due to members—reserve account....................................... 90,865,000 Foreign banks........................................................................... 139,000 All other deposits..................................................................... S8.000 Total reserve............................................ Nonreserve cash............................................. Bills discounted—secured by Government „ obligations................................................. Bills discounted—all other............................. Bills bought in ODen market.......................... U. B. Bonds. . U. S. Treasury Notes..................................... U. 8. certificates of indebtedness.................. Bank premises.................................................. Uncollected items........................................... All other resources........................................... Total deposits......................................... $92,028,000 Federal Reserve notes in actual circulation........................ 68,345.000 Deferred availability items..................................................... 33,229,000 A11 other liabilities................................................................... 516,000 TOTAL LIABILITIES https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis $207,329,000 TOTAL RESOURCES 29 $ 10S.942.000 2,153,000 3,205,000 7,043,000 15,586,000 8.962.000 4,707.000 14,399,000 4.459,000 37,323.000 550,000 $207,329,000 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: Catron, Socorro, 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 728; State Banks 113. DIRECTORS CLASS A:—J. H. FROST (1927), San Antonio, Tex.; HOWELL E. SMITH (1929), 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 (1929), Paris, Texas. CLASS C:—C. C. WALSH (1928), Chairman of Board and Federal Reserve Agent; CLARENCE E. LINZ (1929), 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-9 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 Cashiei'; R. L. FOULKS, General Auditor; W. P. CLARKE, Assistant Auditor; LOCKE, LOCKE, STROUD and RANDOLPH 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 Gold and gold certificates............................ $ 8,495,000 Gold settlement fund. F. R. B’d................... 16,842,000 Gold with Federal Reserve Agents............... 36,280,000 Gold redemption fund..................................... 1,247,000 Reserves other than gold.............................. 8,478,000 Capital paid in..........................................................................$ 4,304,000 Surplus fund.............................................................................. 8,215,000 Government deposits............................................................... 1,079,000 Dus to members—reserve account........................................ 58,276,000 Foreign bank........................................................................... 132,000 All other deposits................................................................... 33,000 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 indentedness................. Bank premises..................................... Uncollected items.........................■............... All other resources........................................... Total deposits...................................... $59,520,000 Federal Reserve notes in actual circulation......................... 43,646,000 Deferred availability items..................................................... 25,585,000 All other liabilities................................................................... 409,000 TOTAL LIABILITIES https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis $141,679,000 TOTAL RESOURCES 30 $ 71,342,000 2,566,000 1,140,000 2,814,000 13,392,000 6,004,000 4,395,000 13,793,000 1,752,000 23,995,000 486,000 $141,679,000 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 574; State Banks 152. DIRECTORS CLASS A:—HOWARD WHIPPLE (1927), Turlock, Calif., C. K. McINTOSH (1928), San Francisco, Calif., T. H. RAMSAY (1929), Red Bluff, Calif. CLASS B:—WM. T. SESNON (1927), Soquel, Calif.; E. H. COX (1928), Madera, Calif.; A. B. C. DOHRMAN (1929), San Francisco, Calif. CLASS C:—WALTON N. MOORE (1927), San Francisco, Calif., Deputy Chairman of Board; WILLIAM SPROULE (1928), San Francisco. Calif.; ISAAC B. NEWTON (1929), San Francisco, Calif., Chairman of Board and Federal Reserve A gent. OFFICERS ISAAC B. NEWTON, Chairman of the Board and Federal Reserve Agent. S. G. SARGENT, Assistant Federal Reserve Agent. ALLAN SPROUL, Assistant Federal Reserve Agent. C. D. PHILLIPS, Assistant Cashier. JNO. U. CALKINS, Governor. WM. A. DAY. Deputy Governor. C. E. EARHART, Assistant Cashier. IRA CLERK, Deputy Governor H. N. MANGELS, Assistant Cashier. L. C. PONTIOUS, Deputy Governor. E. C. MAILLIARD, Assistant Cashier. W. N. AMBROSE, Cashier. FRED C. BOLD, 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; M. McRITCHIE, 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, fRedlands; JESSE B ALEXANDER. Los Angeles. ________________ 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) (Deaeret National Bank Bldg., Main and lat 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. II. FARNSWORTH, Salt Lake City; CHAS. H. BARTON. Ogden; J. SBUSSELL, Pocatello; LAFAYETTE HANCIIETT, Salt Lake City; CHAPIN A. DAY, Ogden; F. J. HAGENBARTH, 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 Capital paid in..........................................................................$ Surplus fund.............................................................................. Government deposits............................................................... Due to members—reserve account....................................... Foreign Bank........................................................................... All other deposits..................................................................... Total deposit*..................................... $173,881,000 Federal Reserve notes in actual circulation......................... Deferred availability items..................................................... All other liabilities................................................................... RESOURCES 8,746,000 16,121,000 1,760,000 166,401,000 264,000 5,456,000 Gold and gold certificates.............................. $ 33,170.000 Gold settlement fund, F, R. B’d................... 37,372.000 Gold with Federal Reserve Agents............... 174,540,000 Gold redemption fund..................................... 2,042,000 Reserves other than gold............................... 8,842,000 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 ofindebtedness................... Bank nremises................................................. • Uncollected items........................................................... All other resources........................................... 171,302,000 37,583,000 337,000 TOTAL LIABILITIES.................................................$407,970,000 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis TOTAL RESOURCES 31 $255,966,000 3,491,000 16,019,000 24,987,000 26,453,000 532,000 15,790,000 22,551,000 3,433,000 37,609,000 1,139,000 $407,970,000 FEDERAL LAND BANK INFORMATION FEDERAL FARM LOAN BOARD WASHINGTON, D. C. E. S. LANDES R. A. COOPER ANDREW W. MELLON, Chairman A. C. WILLIAMS, Farm Loan Commissioner E. E. JONES L. J. PETTIJOHN JOHN H. GUILL A. D. BRIGHT, Secretary DISTRICT No. 1—Bank Located at Springfield, Mass. DISTRICT Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island. Connecticut, New York, and New Jersey. CAPITAL, $2,709,655. DIRECTORS—EDWARD H. THOMSON, President; B. G. McINTYRE, Vice-President; ERWIN H. 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, $3,558,850. DIRECTORS — VULOSKO VAIDEN. President; 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, $3,504,085. DIRECTORS—HOWARD C. ARNOLD. President; L. I. GUION. Vice-President; W. F. STEVENS. Secretary; D. T. GEROW, Treasurer-. ALAN JOHNSTONE. B. B. WILLIAMS, and C. E. VANCE; R. J. TIGHE. Registrar. DISTRICT No. 4—Bank Located at Louisville, Ky. TERRITORY IN DISTRICT—Ohio. Indiana . Kentucky, and Tennessee. CAPITAL, $5,691,605. DIRECTORS—JAMES B. DAVIS. President; H. A. SOMMERS, Vice-President; L. B. CLORE, Secretary; HERMAN F. MONROE. Treasurer ; ERNEST RICE, Director; GEORGE WILBER, and A. P. SANDLES; MACK R. TODD. Registrar. DISTRICT No. 5—Bank Located at New Orleans, La. TERRITORY IN DISTRICT—Alabama. Mississippi, and Louisiana. CAPITAL, $5,587,055. DIRECTORS—T. F. DAVIS. President; R. T. GOODWYN. Vice-President; J. V. De GRUY. C. C. GASPARD. J. S. ALLEN, and A. H. STONE; H. G. ASHLEY. Registrar. Treasurer; J. M. KOONCE. Secretary; DISTRICT No. 6—Bank Located at St. Louis, Mo. TERRITORY IN DISTRICT—Illinois. Missouri and Arkansas. CAPITAL, $4,165,330. DIRECTORS—H. P. BESTOR. President; W. D. GIBBS. Vice-President; O. J. LLOYD. Secretary; L. M. BURGE, Treasurer; C. E. HOPKINS. Director; W. W. MARTIN, and A. P. PATTON; C. S. WILLIAMS, Registrar. DISTRICT No. 7—Bank Located at St. Paul, Minn. TERRITORY IN DISTRICT—Michigan. Wisconsin, Minnesota, and North Dakota. CAPITAL, $6,597,705. DIRECTORS—H. K. JENNINGS. President; BENJ. F. FAAST. Vice President; A. R..BURR, Secretary; E. J. VAN LEUVEN, Treasurer; SAMUEL TORGERSON. Director; A. C. ERICKSON, and JOHN C. SMITH; D. J. McKENZIE, Registrar. DISTRICT No. 8—Bank Located at Omaha, Neb. TERRITORY IN DISTRICT—Iowa, Nebraska, South Dakota, and Wyoming. CAPITAL, $7,131,225. DIRECTORS—D. P. HOGAN. President; A. KOPPERUD, Vice-President; JOHN CARMODY. Secretary: E. D. MORCOM. Treasurer; E. H. BURNETT. Director; P. E. LUCHSINGER. and 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, $4,379,060. DIRECTORS— MILAS LASATER, President; FLOYD M. WILSON. Vice President; A. L. STOCKWELL. Vice President; W. E. FISHER, Secretory,- A. N. ROCHESTER, Treasurer; OLIVER M. LEE, Director, and JOHN FIELDS; C. A. RYKER, Registrar. DISTRICT No. 10—Bank Located at Houston, Tex. TERRITORY IN DISTRICT—The State of Texas. CAPITAL, $6,634,460. 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, $2,819,950. DIRECTORS—W. D. ELLIS. President: JOHN T. WILSON. Vice President; A. M. MORTON, Secretary; SIMS ELY. Treasurer; GEORGE SAWYER. Director; W. M. HOWELL, 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, $4,973,410. DIRECTORS—GEO. C. JEWETT. President; W. S. McCORMACK. Vice President; STUART A. RICE, Secretary, A. B. THOMPSON. Treasurer; H. H. PIGGOTT, B. D. THOMPSON, and HUGH SPROAT; L. J. BIRDSEYE. Registrar. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 32 everything is on the map! You need only look at a map of France and think Tower, the Cathedral of Notre Dame, j of what it represents. Immediately the Louvre, the Arc de Triomphe and a series of pictures roll up before you! the famous boulevards. The English Whether you have been there or not Channel is the Invincible Armada and is a matter of no consequence. You Gertrude Ederle. Orleans is Saint Joan. have read the Three Musketeers. You Versailles is Louis XIV and the League have studied the history of Napoleon of Nations. and the Revolution. You have fol Equally rich in romance and his lowed with anxiety and triumph the torical suggestion are the maps of career of the A. E. F. England, Germany, Italy, Spain, India, All these things are there. With no Greece, Egypt. effort on your part, and with very Why not acquire the habit of look little imagination, these crooked lines ing at them this way? You will find it and foreign names become France itself! fascinating entertainment, for good And they are not alone the France of maps have all the charm and cultural today. They are the France of all his value of good books. Teach your tory, fromCharlemagnetoClemenceau. children to read them, and read them They have the power to call to mind frequently yourself. a broad jest from Rabelais, a character Rand McNally Maps, Globes and from Balzac, a page of minute analysis Atlases are always scientific, accurate from Proust—all in a single moment. and up to date. Obtainable at leading The spot called Paris is the Eiffel booksellers’ and stationers’, or direct. ook I O the Rand MfNally Auto Road r Maps, America’s most popular tourist guides, is now added the Rand MfNally Auto Road Atlas of the United States. This new Atlas contains handy road maps of all States, detailed maps of the vicinities of the larger cities, in dices and brief descriptions of all Na tional Parks and Monuments—making a handy ready-reference guide which every motor tourist will wish to own. Both Atlas and Road Maps obtainable at all booksellers’, stationers', drug storesandnews stands—Atlas, 75c; Road Maps, 35c each. Rand McNally Maps for every purpose School Maps Climatic Maps Auto Road Maps Economic Maps Political Maps Ethnological Maps Commercial Maps Historical Maps Radio Maps Mileage Maps Population Maps City Guide Maps https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Map Headquarters Dept. K-58 536 S. Clark Street, Chicago Washington San Francisco 270 Madison Avenue, New York Los Angeles & T7ngitude West' flroHL (ire >Lake bake unpeg Winnipegosis Saekatg ike St. Joseph iPpeIi'e ,Estevan turtle S/ ILake^8^ River William We Rovaee hTJeedBx Devils I looseheal *fV‘\ Ottau\ Sudburj Tello* [ amcstvvra \V To v' X Rhiri ^/yOrtonvilU, Belle Fourche TVbite wood Shoshone Q [arinette 'City . iGrayDog Redfield y—^S JVRapiSrity PiERK? Shalcor 'XTracy Ipe tone Huron Chamberlain | Albert LeaJ vMitcheU \SU>«* Sjigemont l.tiea shkoshyj VVinonaN initoWi Tond.Ss N.du Lao C^Povtu liAustin [ilwauk^eM \ ^Hou.lfr I Ladison*/ SLAXd Ainsworth Ellsworth Norfolk Sticks Quickest Is the Most Reliable Keeps Clean Never Spoils Davenpoi Columbi .Alma ^ |Dks lonncil Bluffs nnour, fooLUM®113 \ .,W^e W" l~ iJonce] Hast ins-s Su pvriorAFairbury Nori.-n^ .Clifton1 Atehiaoir y\B Vincennes \{y, ItraUa/jT^ Alliafi^ u>..eb5r^s: Sedalia' >1). KAJ ^l®mosa'' —‘“must J^PtODito . Qiuton ----- TJlVvVncetOpI S Emporia ■atufr^- chinson p0 'Wichita Trinidad Anthony Santa https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIBRARY PASTE Parsons .Winfield Espanola ^SpriDga \ [San Bernard'S ■ Fayette' Colusa Canadian ouqueryot ’aughn t lattanooga, 'Oklahom. Amarillo ntBviUeX^^ ChIekasha 'Fort Smith1" / Vo ^Green"'^ (beTton^^Tc^YJflB) Socorro Duncan ] ^ , Childress' £ sta ca d i > \Vartbqyg Gurdoiy OTrbJ. Lubbock /McGehee' lenriettaN 'N. Bowie^ T^rdahut Xaroden \ West Point, Cylumou^n^ vCa|sbad X\L^^A.nni^N udhuigha111 V * M jLaG range! , ,Tennille. A B A M A/ ^/Durant !llr'-Mrjl & 3 a. AUalig^^dj Atoka NCH>pyUkV : l arshall. twater ■jderW® icr\cufi VU-kslnu'l Morgan, Midland > Greeny] Palestine ^5 S JeSURCross, fFlor^ton Tufkih P s«-U^u,. Kerrville is Orleans 3 [an Antonio Piedraa N< 3 luroirfiis of the ilveston ’Mississippi River Vetershur'c 'Fainpa &a Nuevo" 'Laredo jrpua Christ! RAND M9NALLY Tuoy®ASD POPULAR MAP OF UNITED STATES Saltillo. Durango .Victoria %ifii L. tie la SCALE wJh Madre Statute Miles, 240=1 Inch. Copyright by Rand McNally A Company, Chicago, Made in U. 8. A. Tsi.**03 a^-db.os^/| TORTVOaS lSlAS»Sf https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis SUPPLIES "J/^EEPING up customer service and keeping down unneces sary operating costs—this . is, perhaps, the most acute problem of today in bank operation. It demands of the purchasing execu tive a wide acquaintance with sources of dependable and eco nomical bank supplies. The best is generally the cheapest in the long run. You can broaden your market for quality products by studying the supply announce ments in this Directory. Joint Stock Land Banks. No. Chartered Title LocationStates in which operating 58. 8-19-22. The First Joint Stock Land Bank of Montgomery...................... Montgomery, Ala. Ala. & Ga. 2-20-26. The Southwest Joint Stock Land Bank of Little Rock.............. Little Rock, Ark. 81. Ark. & Texas 5-29-22. The Pacific Coast Joint Stock Land Bank of Los Angeles.......... Los Angeles, Cal. 50. 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. <fc Nev. 38. 4-18-22. The Denver Joint Stock Land Bank of Denver.......................... Denver, Colo. Colo. & Wyo. 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. & Ill. 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. Ill. & Ind. 9-11-26. The Indianapolis Joint Stock Land Bank of Indianapolis......... Indianapolis, Ind. 83. Ind. & Mich. 82. 3- 2-26. The Union Trust Joint Stock Land Bank of Indianapolis......... Indianapolis, Ind. Ind. & Ohio. 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. 5-15-19. The Central Iowa Joint Stock Land Bank of Des Moines.......... Des Moines, la. *19. 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. 1The 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. 5- 3-22. The Louisville Joint Stock Land Bank of Louisville....................Louisville, Ky. 43. 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. 4-10-22. The First Joint Stock Land Bank of New Orleans...................... New Orleans, La. 36. Miss. & La. 76. 4- 7-23. The Maryland-Virginia Joint Stock Land Bank of Baltimore. . .Baltimore, Md. Md. & Va. 5- 9-23. The Union Joint Stock Land Bank of Detroit............................ Detroit, Mich. 79. Mich. & Ohio 1-14-19. The ' *11. First Joint Stock Land Bank of Minneapolis........................ Minneapolis, Minn. Iowa & Minn. 41. 5- 2-22. 1The Minneapolis-Trust Joint Stock Land Bank of Minneapolis . Minneapolis, Minn. N. D. & Minn. 6-25-19. 1The Southern Minnesota Joint Stock Land Bank of Minneapolis. .Minneapolis, Minn. S. D. & Minn. 21. *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. 1- 9-18. The Kansas City Joint Stock Land Bank of Kansas City...........Kansas City, Mo. 5. Mo. & Kans. 1 *65. 10-23-22. The Missouri Joint Stock Land Bank of Kansas City.................Kansas City, Mo. Mo. & Okla. 4- 9-23. The Equitable Joint Stock Land Bank of Macon.......................Macon, Mo. *77. 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. *13. 4-15-19. The Montana Joint Stock Land Bk. of Helena...........................Helena, Mont. Ida & Mont. 1 14. 4-17-19. The Fremont Joint Stock Land Bank of Fremont........................Lincoln, Nebr. Iowa & Nebr. 7-12-18. The Lincoln Joint Stock Land Bank of Lincoln........................... Lincoln, Nebr. 8. Iowa & Nebr. 5- 8-19. The 1 *17. Peters Joint Stock Land Bank of Omaha.............................. Omaha, Nebr. Iowa & Nebr. 5- 2-22.. The New York & New Jersey Joint Stock Land Bank of Newark.. Newark, N. J. 42. N. Y. & N. J. 5- 2-22. The N. Y. Joint Stock Land Bank of New York.........................New York City 40. 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. 1 *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 12-14-22. 70. The Ohio-Pennsyl vania Joint Stock Land Bank of Cleveland . .Cleveland, Ohio Ohio & Pa. 96-22. *59. The First Joint Stock Land Bank of Dayton............................... Dayton, Ohio Ohio & Ind. 10-13-22. 63. 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. 5-29-22. The Pacific Coast Joint Stock Land Bank of Portland................ Portland, Ore. 47. Wash. & Ore. 1-17-23. The Pennsylvania-Maryland Joint Stock Land Bank of *74. Harrisburg................................................................................... Harrisburg^ Pa. Pa. & Md. 68. 11-14-22. The Pennsylvania Joint Stock Land Bank of Philadelphia......... Philadelphia, Pa. Pa. & N. Y. 39. 4-24-22. The First Carolines 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. 5-29-22. The Pacific Coast Joint Stock Land Bank of Salt Lake City.......... Salt Lake City 48. Idaho & Utah 78. 5- 2-23. The Potomac Joint Stock Land Bank of Alexandria, Ya.............Washington, D. C. Va. & Md. *18. 5-12-19. The Colonial Joint Stock Land Bank of Norfolk..........................Norfolk, Va. 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- 6-18. The Bankers Joint Stock Land Bank of Milwaukee.....................Milwaukee, Wis. 9. Minn. & Wis. ♦Liquidated https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 32-A CLEARING HOUSES IN THE UNITED STATES______________ Babson’s 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 thp 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. Jan., 1926. July, 1926 Jan., 1927 Jan., 1926. July, 1926. Jan., 1927 DEPOSITS DEPOSITS DEPOSITS DEPOSITS DEPOSITS DEPOSITS 54,207,430! 53.287.800 8,708,460 Duluth, Minn.............. $ 54,955,320 9,231,830 I 9,906,740 Aberdeen, S. D.............. 9,322,200 9,174,480, 7,038,920 Dunkirk, N. Y............ 6,861,960 9,279,950 7,418,710 Adrian, Mich................. 4,891,030 5,347,810 87.889.520 East Chicago, Ind. 5,344,840 89,228,760 86,523,500 Akron, Ohio.................. 1,313,940 1,221,310 4,458,270 Elberton, Ga................. 573,110 Alameda, Calif............... 4,395,290 •El Paso, Tex................ 27,000,980 25,475,140 26.399.930 4,449,170 4,399,490 Albany, Ga.................... 257,292,090 Elyria, Ohio................. 16.751.860 264,354,710 246,374,810 •Albany, N. Y.............. 4,830,910 4,667,350 5,156,150 Emporia, Kan............... 5,069,620 Albert Lea, Minn.......... 11,409,940 11,923,530 12,444,230 41.688.230 Enid, Okla..................... 40,352,740 39,204,870 Allentown, Pa................ 2,489,410 18,151,260 Ennis, Tex..................... 1,815,440 1,722,630 17,073,620 16,374,840 Altoona, Pa.................... 52,166,340 54,517,170 23,180,020 Erie, Pa.......................... 52,866,880 16,747,620 10,667,790 Amarillo, Tex................ 3,198,110 Estherville, Iowa.......... 3,187,950 850,000 3,450,610 3,645,140 Ames, Iowa ................... 5.969.170 Eugene, Ore................... 7,616,840 7.722,020 7,836,340 Anaheim, Calif.............. 16.432.700 Evansville, Ind.............. 48,562,630 47.485,370 51)552,050 16,601,510 15,520,200 Ann Arbor, Mich.......... 4.475.780 6,092,320 Fairfield, Iowa............... 4,201,930 6,581,790 Annistown, Ala.............. 23,166,770 Fall River, Mass........... 75,608,610 77,921,580 75,947,020 21,607,670 16,499,330 Asheville. N. C.............. 16,578,430 15,706,480 6,128,130 Fargo, N. D.................. 16,435,440 6,238,880 6,533,690 Atchison, Kan............... 5,118,240 5,252,770 5.232,430 112,986,340 Faribault, Minn............ 109,929,430 119,065,600 •Atlanta, Ga.................. 6,067,090 15,119,410 Fergus Falls, Minn........ 14,628,280 13,999,940 Augusta, Ga................... 40,972,230 45,882,390 16.658.290 Flint, Mich.................... 38,014,710 17,158,940 17,008,750 Aurora, Ill.................... . 10,726,210 10,464,430 19.518.610 Fort Dodge, la.............. 10,255,340 22,062,430 21,937,090 Austin, Tex.................... 62,179,820 64.446.930 13.297.640 Fort Wayne, Ind.......... 60,823,910 13,196,710 13.708.410 Bakersfield, Calif.......... 70,356,949 73,573,410 550,953,070 Fort Worth, Tex......... 70.918.710 520,034,890 532,509,780 •Baltimore, Md............. 10,625,410 10,980,250 38,766,850 Franklin, Pa.................. 10,615,100 40,003,700 37.745.470 Bangor, Me.................... 10,472,090 Frederick, Md............... 24.285.710 25,040,890 25,282,140 9,425,860 8,304,910 Bartlesville, Okla.......... 4,257,660 4,519,580 28.472.520 Fremont, Neb................ 4,036,460 27,513,600 27,608,630 Battle Creek, Mich 4,528,450 3,537,490 28.291.910 Fresno, Calif.................. 2,909,340 27,026,110 28,450.030 Bay City, Mich............. 3,099,540 20,684,020 Fullerton, Calif.............. 19,197,070 17,345,550 Beaumont, Tex.............. 25,661,050 28.657.960 10,607,920 Galveston, Tex............ 27,445,310 10,614,320 10,135,450 Bellingham, Wash. .... 17,639.030 16.790.860 8,664,340 Gary, Ind....................... 17,926,800 7,281,010 8,212,840 Benton Harbor, Mich. 8,430,920 7,378)250 8,168,740 9,033,850 Gastonia, N. C.............. 8,077,480 7,209,740 Berkeley, Calif.............. 3,047,180 3,062,240 2,913,980 25,208,970 Glasgow, Ky.................. 24,719,990 24.873.410 Bethlehem, Pa............... 4,124,820 7.515.440 Goldsboro, N. C............ 6,905,220 6,874,920 Billings, Mont............... 8.122.780 8,122,000 8,667,040 43,238,670 Grand Forks, N. D.... 42,860,700 42,000,140 Binghamton, N. Y........ 7,349,500 7,195,640 8,615,440 85,085,840 Grand Island, Neb....... 76,838,810 84,897,690 •Birmingham, Ala........ 3,439,890 3,107,200 3,639,500 14.913.910 Grand Junction, Colo.. 14,725,000 14.854.470 Bloomington, Ill............ 82,489,530 84,161,880 16.192.640 Grand Rapids, Mich.. 85,520,870 14,401,210 15,061,060 Boise, Idaho................... 13,256,710 15,254,190 6.430.700 Great Falls, Mont........ 13,657,070 Boone, Iowa................... 14,426,150 14,095,550 ‘•Boston, Mass............. 1,649,084,480 1,665,762,430 1,673,423,320 Green Bay, Wis............ 12.884.880 3,224,400 Greensboro, N, C.......... 23.684.850 24,419,750 21.150.960 3,476,780 3,421,830 Bowling Green, Ky 1,321,380 Greensburg, Pa.............. 20,041,960 19,640,180 19,912,360 1,271,280 1,234,570 Brookfield, Mo.............. 4,346,700 4,113,890 Greenville, Miss............ 4,346,700 4,123,730 3,986,790 3,725,150 Brunswick, Ga............... 12,644,630 12,059,030 542,686,710 Greenville, S. C............. 12,797,490 520,290,710 524,884,480 •Buffalo, N. Y............... 4,870,080 4,768,050 17,192,620 Guthrie, Okla................. 4,785,300 16,697,740 17,017,520 Butler, Pa...................... 72,443,240 Hagerstown, Md........... 18,745,690 18,685,170 19,034,830 70,664,210 67,760,420 Camden, N. J................ 13,109,430 13,228,560 53,007,770 Hamilton, Ohio............. 13.526.850 55,257,640 54,758,710 Canton, Ohio................. 12,629,100 12,729,020 5,136,500 Hammond, Ind.............. 12,826,150 5,088,480 5,590,650 Cape Girardeau, Mo. .. 5,450,210 5,867,470 5,418,570 3,209,820 Hannibal, Mo......... 3,165,680 3,294,900 Carthage, Mo................ 11,013,890 Harrisburg, Pa.............. 39,186,700 42,161,240 42,274,380 10,533,840 11,823,160 Casper, Wyo.................. 42.283.160 Hartford, Conn............. 217,825,640 214,186,210 222,771,690 43,134,150 42,105,980 •Cedar Rapids, Iowa... 5,299,350 10,295,200 Hastings, Neb................ 6,038,580 5,851.780 10,033,850 9,931,630, Champaign, Ill.............. 27,397,400 28,072,380 4,471,840 Hazleton, Pa.................. 29,271,100 4,524,450 4,499,680 Charles City, Iowa........ 4,799,560 4,955,100 4,992,210 43,484,150 Helena, Ark................... 43,517,830 46,561,680 Charleston, S. C............ 12,138,070 13,667,080 36,753,330 •Helena, Mont.............. 13,972,010 37,978,080 36,616,170 Charleston, W. Va........ 4,408,470 4,699,700 4,823,230 37.644.550 Henderson, Ky.............. 36,986,600 36,718,330 Charlotte, N. C............. 3,763,330 3,619,900 50,318,690 Henderson, N.Car........ 3,468,390 46,675,010 •Chattanooga, Tenn. .. 49,069,910 53,520,350 54,666,070 990,780 Holyoke, Mass............... 50,701,610 1.390.780 990,780 Cheraw, S. C................. 27,218,460 Homestead, Pa.............. 11.484.880 11,542,020 11.773.970 26,172,810 26,885,350 Chester, Pa.................... 6.578.860 2,700,070 Hot Sp. N. Park, Ark.. 6,355,600 7,588,860 2.710.780 2,815,120 Chester, S. C................. 8,259,710 •Houston, Tex............... 133,292,590 132,744,380 147,690,250 8,247,870 7,357,490 Cheyenne, Wyo............. 22,119,050 22,562,280 ‘•Chicago, 111................ 2,654,147,770 2,641,211,450 2,602,605,420 Huntington, W. Va.... 20,417,230 540,740 3,594,900 Huntington Park, Calif. 2,613,360 3,184,480 3,178,750 Chilli cothe, Mo............. 296,106,420 Hutchinson, Kan........ 8,634,820 295,771,880 7,610,670 10,694,950 •Cincinnati, Ohio.......... 293,097,230 3.540.800 887,193,580 Independence, Mo........ 841,863,590 ‘•Cleveland, Ohio........ 927,465,425 18,417,270 Indianapolis, Ind.... 157,645,110 162,720,750 169.261.190 18,347,690 Colorado Springs, Colo.. 17,537,550 13,693,420 Jackson, Mich................ 19,864,090 20,053,790 20,655,290 20,069,630 Columbia, S. C.............. 13,507,200 12.108.550 Jacksonville, Fla......... 138,315,190 130,913,050 103,961,390 12,728,990 12,272,070 Columbus, Ga............... 119,901,920 Jacksonville, Ill............. 9,491,150 113,942,740 ‘•Columbus, Ohio......... 9,978,560 10,534,830 115,589,580 3,398,950 10.776.160 Jamestown, N. Y........... 31,234,890 10,308,850 31,426,700 Connellsville, Pa........... 10,723,780 1,043,370 Jamestown, N. D.......... 3,414,850 3,462,930 32,882,470 1,261,450 960,430 Cordele, Ga.................... 8.261.170 Johnstown, Pa............... 40,920,080 9,695,490 41,640,860 42,431,130 Corsicana, Tex.............. 8,855,390 14.697.610 Joplin, Mo...................... 11,971,860 13,422,050 12,990,520 Council Bluffs, Iowa. . . 135,974,560 Kalamazoo, Mich......... 21,092,020 20,888,550 21.511.190 147.911,780 138.379,590 •Dallas, Tex..:............ 9,362,430 •Kansas City, Kan. .. 28,730,170 9,091,640 27,940,740 26.952.320 9,713,410 Danville, Ill............. . 55.624.230 •Kansas City, Mo.... 320,288,390 313,739,270 303,193,060 54,061,220 Davenport, Iowa.......... 55,113,870 59,665,090 Knoxville, Tenn............ 35,464,980 53,816,970 55,384,670 39,132,500 38,862,300 Dayton, Ohio................ 8,966,180 15,457,060 Kokomo, Ind................. 15,377,170 9,064,620 Decatur, Ill.................... 15,374,620 9,379,830 173,607,850 ‘LaCrosse, Wis.............. 13,432,640 173,978,040 ‘•Denver, Colo.............. 14,398,320 14.735.320 164,618,570 12,905,840 Lancaster, Pa................ 41,222,620 11,643,810 11,804,790 Derby, Conn.................. 44,048,990 43,464,800 67,765,600 Lansing, Mich............... 28,283,580 •Des Moines, Iowa.... 82,088,190 84,825,690 29,999,170 29.592.970 7,075,800 829,194,600 LaSalle, Ill..................... 837,387,492 ‘•Detroit, Mich............ 880,870,020 6,511,630 6,571,690 5,545,370 2,758,090 Lawrence, Kan.............. Dickinson, N. D........... 3,379,300 5,604,250 3,011,990 5,310,840 8,826,630 2.167.440 Leavenworth, Kan........ 8,826,470 Dodge City, Kan.......... 8,776,910 5,598,250 Lebanon, Pa.................. 11,140,160 5,594,700 5,889,460 11,420,180 11,883,580 Dothan, Ala................... 1,565,000 Lexington, Ky............... 20,569,660 1,663,000 1,565,000 22,475,460 21,985,540 Dublin, Ga..................... 21.803.290 Lima, Ohio..................... 11,759,480 21,087,160 •Dubuque, Iowa........... 20,939,910 11,885,670 12,306,160 • 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. •See Bayonne, Hoboken, Jersey City, Union City, and West New York. N. J. in bank list for banks which are members of the Northern New Jersey Clear ng House Association, located at 32 Liberty St., New York City. N. Y. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 32-B CLEARING HOUSES IN THE UNITED STATES—Continued Jan., 1926. July, 1926 Jan., 1927 DEPOSITS DEPOSIT8 DEPOSITS Jan., 1926 July, 1926 DEPOSITS DEPOSITS Jan., 1927 DEPOSITS Lincoln, Ill................... 2,172,350$ 3,905,85 $ 3,719,180 Reno, Nev...................... 16,380,520 $ I 16,619,780 18,011,870 • Lincoln, Neb.............. 40,464,200 42,121,370 41,025,640 •Richmond, Va............. 138,043,030 132,475,350 136,608,310 • Little Rock, Ark........ 49,786,630 47,623,950 49,194,030 •Ritzville, Wash........... 980,550 913,040 975,350 Long Beach, Calif.... 55,018.570 53,195,970 54,163,930 Riverside, Calif............. 9,428,270 10,009,720 9,589,200 Lorain, Ohio................. 10,240,770 10,154,920 10,457,040 Roanoke, Va.................. 26,192,370 26,173,850 28,503,430 ‘•Los Angeles, Calif.. 947,637,800 958,206,580 1,000,377,050 Rochester, Minn........... 7,701,150 8,059,830 7,679,390 ‘•Louisville, Ky.......... 138,444,350 137,971,170 143,970,040 Rochester, N. Y............ 331,538,990 335,321,890 350,451,170 Lowell, Mass................. 84,692,980 85,755,130 87,717,400 Rockford, Ill.................. 29,787,230 32,185,030 33,241,650 Lynn, Mass.................... 69,088,840 70,661,140 74,549,910 Rock Island, Ill............. 17,005,210 17,605,940 17,655,300 Macon, Ga..................... 19,099,300 18,958,980 18,467,300 Rocky Mount, N. C. . . 6,367,040 6,428,340 6,519,130 Madison, Wis................ 26,804,970 30,384,390 29,667,980 Rome, Ga....................... 5,194,250 4,736,650 5,564,040 Manchester, N. H........ 70,112,820 69,990,280 72,091,490 Sacramento, Calif......... 68,775,850 64,295,320 66,719,642 Manhattan, Kan........... 2,793,330 2,270,140 2,989,830 Saginaw, Mich............... 36,933,620 37,502,020 37.623.510 Manitowoc, Wis............ 8,564,430 8,661,050 9,109,010 St. Joseph, Mo............ 45,194,010 42,321,370 38,648,070 Mankato, Minn............. 10,647,440 11,101,330 10.969.470 •St. Louis, Mo............ 649,742,870 629,535,650 618,614,020 Mansfield, Ohio............. 11,997,430 12,655,590 12.479.470 •St. Paul, Minn.......... 163,886,280 150,368,660 162,037,220 McAlester, Okla............ 5,494,690 4,478,210 4,262,990 St. Petersburg, Fla........ 28,240,050 Medford, Ore................. 5,053,640 5,190,530 4,994,250 Salisbury, N. C............. 1,122,970 1,264,550 1,368,710 •Memphis, Tenn........... 110,341,720 100,259,730 94,280,740 ‘•Salt Lake City, Utah. 77,796,690 74,479,590 80.479.510 Meridian, Miss.............. 11,539,190 11,353,830 11,219,270 •San Antonio, Tex........ 59,117,590 64,142,900 61,097,660 Miami, Fla..................... 117,354,390 115,324,030 85,342,040 San Bernardino, Calif.. 10,051,210 10,137,410 10,504,280 ‘•Milwaukee, Wis........ 258,804,970 262,519,420 262,844,910 San Diego, Calif............ 60,521,070 65,068,830 63,732,080 ‘•Minneapolis, Minn... 321,802,840 312,370,910 314,526,980 San Francisco, Calif... 1,458,666,930 1,460,175,930 1,510,774,400 Minot. N. D................... 5,797,380 6,294,070 5,694,810 San Jose, Calif........... 19,092,570 17,549,020 18,103,460 Mobile, Ala.................... 33,680,930 33,971,070 34,147,580 San Pedro, Calif........ 6,403,060 Modesto, Calif............... 5,154,640 Santa Barbara, Calif.. 8,626,080 8,214,910 8,263,140 Moline, Ill...................... 21,093,450 22,036,260 22,201,110 Santa Monica, Calif. . 2,844,930 2,759,970 4,010,820 Montclair, N. J............. 29,505,920 31,786,240 32,828,720 Santa Rosa, Calif.... 3,179,010 3,468,470 3,755,170 ‘Montgomery, Ala....... 19,169,930 18,870,360 18.294.470 Sarasota, Fla.............. 8,435,500 Muscatine, Iowa........... 13,073,020 13,341,650 13,573,450 •Savannah, Ga.......... 86,449,400 83,086,250 85,503,710 Muskegon, Mich........... 16,117,710 18,535,620 17,568,230 Scranton, Pa.............. 120,368,220 104,502,120 131,819,010 •Muskogee, Okla.......... 11,722,960 11,530.330 12,237,830 Seattle, Wash.......... 197,099,510 206,231,050 187,820,220 ‘Nashville, Tenn........... 77,524,990 78,009,380 76,624,960 Sedalia, Mo................. 5,808,160 4,762,980 4,824,210 Nebraska City, Neb. . . 2.786.780 2,843,870 2,877,880 Sheboygan, Wis......... 19,713,270 New Albany, Ind.......... 9.480.780 9,979,010 10,059,690 Sherman, Tex.............. 6,427,370 6,260,500 6,080,160 ‘Newark, N. J.............. 355,162,786 361,377,070 384,253,250 Sioux City, Iowa.... 39,554,790 37,797,930 36.177.590 New Bedford, Mass.. . . 74,452,950 76,471,150 77,234,070 Sioux Falls, S. D......... 9,554,640 11,233,780 10,821,800 New Brighton, Pa........ 3,444,030 3,388,010 3,337,820 South Bend, Ind......... 36,470,210 36,073,020 36,474,670 New Castle, Pa............. 19,391,770 19,442,730 19,825,570 South St. Paul, Minn. 7,088,990 6,648,900 8,008,690 ‘New Haven, Conn... 136.215.360 140,073,120 140,474,930 Spartanburg. S. C. . .. 11,181,690 10,918,800 10,905,800 Newnan, Ga................. 1,745,310 1,867,090 2,094,520 Spokane, Wash.......... 57,168,710 56,164,880 55,655,680 ‘•New Orleans, La. . . 264.572.360 234,309,180 243,653,600 Springfield, Ill.............. 31,115,410 34,190,510 31,498,750 Newport News, Va. . . 12,086,080 12,597,600 12,730,920 Springfield, Mass........ 143,974,700 147,270,150 150,785,891 ‘•New York, N. Y ... 12,072,190,370 11725591780 12,525,457,258 Springfield, Mo............ 17,724,150 15,312,480 16,873,370 Niagara Falls, N. Y.. . 35,348,840 35,774,780 36,634,770 Springfield, Ohio.......... 17,631,090 17,667,410 18,027,400 Norfolk, Va.................. 58,019,280 58,444,470 25,081,550 Stamford, Conn........... 39,197,000 39,158,770 38,909,180 Norristown, Pa............ 20,211,270 19,320,520 19,510,330 Steubenville, Ohio.... 20,335,680 19,756,530 19.695.550 ★ Northern New Jersey Clearing Hous e Ass’n,(33 Li berty St., New Stockton, Calif............ 22,167,970 21,263,540 21.292.140 York City, N. Y.) Superior, Wis............... 10,790,640 10,861,190 10,329,640 •Oakland, Calif............. 119,486,870 119,466,540 128,923,580 Syracuse, N. Y............ 184,336,970 159,907,130 195,483,300 Ocala, Fla....................... 5,970,510 6,457,580 6,841,230 Tacoma, Wash .......... 22,446,010 23,444,350 22,996,500 Oelwein, Iowa........... 3,074,510 2,696,440 2,632,260 Tallahassee, Fla........... 4,977,120 ‘•Ogden, Utah.............. 21,346,203 19,326,300 22,422,600 Tampa, Fla.................. 105,417,620 84,319,950 71,364,440 Oil City, Pa.................... 17,410,690 16,657,670 19,450,980 Terre Haute, Ind........ 29,770,020 31,745,420 32,344,820 ‘•Oklahoma City, Okla. 74,632,790 74,994,580 78,381,070 Texarkana, Ark .-Tex.. 19,568,860 18,330,160 17.995.990 Okmulgee, Okla............. 9,288,170 10,511,880 10.151.490 Toledo, Ohio.............. 160,705,920 161,043,870 168,810,160 Olympia, Wash.............. 5,467,140 Topeka, Kan.............. 31,869,660 31,477,500 33,448,710 •Omaha, Neb................. 114,513,850 112,764,280 106,584,270 Trenton, N. J............... 89,514,960 93,815,290 97,700,610 Ontario, Calif. (Ontario and Upland) . 2,986,670 Tucson, Ariz................ 8,073,200 8,693,660 9,730,830 Orange, N. J.................. 21,877,310 22,982,040 23.833.910 Tulsa, Okla............... 83,222,330 98,608,340 97.425.990 Orangeburg, S. C.......... 5.656.570 5,489,930 5,715,560 Twin Falls, Idaho. . . . 3,727,060 3,211,800 3,399,860 Osage, Iowa.................... 2,625,360 2,663,740 2,136,210 Valdosta, Ga................ 7,012,970 5,705,180 4,252,850 Oshkosh, Wis................. 16.554.560 17,656,750 17.116.910 Vicksburg, Miss.......... 11,757,020 11,898,170 11,521,110 Owensboro, Ky.............. 9,623,400 9,323,770 9,180,600 Waco, Tex.................. 18,973,240 17,475,030 18.306,460 Palestine, Tex................ 3,255,390 2,425,200 2,611,770 Warren, Pa................... 23,894,730 Paris, Ky........................ 3.148.570 3,078,630 2.711.890 Washington, D. C. .. 237,600,560 246,321,740 239,117,150 Parsons, Kan................. 3,372,190 3,048,120 3,012,690 Washington, Ga.......... 946,430 930,570 909,990 ‘Pasadena, Calif........... 27.905.560 28,634,260 29,849,870 Waterbury, Conn........ 63,111,850 66,270,420 65,074,660 Passaic, N. J.................. 44,278,870 44,790,640 46,061,640 Waterloo, Iowa............ 12,752,350 14,837,950 14.674.810 •Peoria, Ill..................... 39,767,440 40,612,120 39,912,250 Watertown, S. D........ 5,194,310 4,828,280 4,704,470 ‘•Philadelphia, Pa. ... 1,794,515,930 1,800,586,890 1,848,176,660 Watertown, Wis.......... 4.788.590 Phillipsburgj N. J......... 6,572,230 6,719,740 7,097,640 Watsonville, Calif. .. . 4,602,480 4,573,610 4,916,520 Phoenix, Ariz................. 24,963,050 27,628,700 27,806,200 Wheeling, W. Va........ 52,415,370 52,313,490 51,342,510 Pine Bluff, Ark.............. 14,202,670 12,937,860 13.865.490 Wichita, Kan........... 42,025,010 40,944,090 44,044,420 Pittsburg, Kan.............. 7,475,340 7,694,130 7,572,610 Wichita Falls, Tex ... 26,026,580 27,702,440 26,831,270 •Pittsburgh, Pa............. 930,146,160 919,656,900 935,868,470 Wilkes-Barre, Pa........ 67,399,340 64,767,520 67,488,010 Pittston, Pa.................... 19.524.780 Williamsport, Pa......... 23,245,700 23,506,350 26.673.140 Pocatello, Idaho............ 3,992,300 4,261,920 4,669,130 Wilmington, Calif........ 713,940 Pontiac, Mich................ 22,607,870 26,815,040 24,744,210 Wilmington, Del.......... 84,132,130 83,921,440 89,228,890 Portland, Me................. 93,246,460 97,767,740 99,952,220 Wilmington, N. C .. .., 22,716,480 20,955,190 20,834,830 ‘•Portland, Ore............ 147,041,040 152,413,790 151,410,005 Winchester, Va............. 5,843,980 5,585,810 5.834.810 Portsmouth, Va. (See N or folk) Winona, Minn............... 15,375,980 15,404,870 15,503,680 Pottsville, Pa................. 20,183,040 20,102,210 21,073,230 Winter Haven, Fla.. . . 5,259,320 3.422.550 Providence, R. I............ 374,500,820 381,025,240 397,572,360 Worcester, Mass........... 196,478,990 200,411,810 204,418,000 •Pueblo, Colo................ 23,273,200 20,905,100 26.902.780 Yakima, Wash.............. 10,677,860 7,742,770 6,958,970 Quincy, Ill...................... 24,101,710 24.273,120 24,223,500 Yankton, S. D............... 3,043,130 Raleigh, N. C................ 18,093,200 19,054,440 18,116,050 York, Pa......................... 29,681,940 30,122,780 29,774,500 Reading, Pa................... 58,677,390 62,342,990 62,845,710 Youngstown, Ohio........ 61,847,400 64,087,130 65,616,910 Redondo Beach, Calif.. 3,331,240 Zanesville, Ohio............ 17,845,910 17,471,240 17,918,080 Red Wing, Minn........... 5,635,510 5,729,440 5.600.890 , *\bei0r™Jia*m? of ciiy in above list denotes Clearing House examination. WSSSf N° Clearing House Association, located at 83 Liberty St., New York City, NY https://fraser.stlouisfed.org ' 32-C Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis i?S.'t&r^SSfeIiiSillSe0.Wr‘ e,1^£S,S' which members or of the cn are are memDers Northern New Jersey CONSOLIDATED CAPITULATION FOR JANUARY 1927 STATEMENTS 1 STATE Alabama-------Arkansas_____ Colorado-------Connecticut... Dist. of Col.... Florida.............. Georgia---------Idaho................ Indiana.............. Iowa-------------Kansas---------Louisiana------Maryland------MassachusettsMichigan_____ Minnesota-----Mississippi----Missouri--------Montana........... NewHampshire New Jersey___ New Mexico... New York____ North Carolina North Dakota. Ohio_________ Pennsylvania.. Rhode Island . South Carolina South Dakota. Tennessee____ Texas............. Utah Virginia______ Washington__ I West Virginia.. Wyoming_____ RESOURCES LIABILITIES Total Total Total State Jlat'l Banks Private Banks indTrust Banks! Cos. 104 4 15 85 284 128 65 19 14 63 84 2 55 490 240 304 257 142 40 57 84 155 13d 284 37 13d 75 161 ID 55 295 2f 560 79 148 346 356 98 877 12 68 103 104 652 20 4.3 182 110 124 157 32 ♦3 271 13 ____ 57 4 369 650 ______ 2 178 7 169 40 ______ 30 *1 273 41 437 38 _____ *2 97 1,384 ______ *124 716 136 1,117 *6 939 ______ 455 1 250 132 _____ 5 212 *6 309 140 614 .............. 942 317 ______ *2 1,330 *2 137 ______ 908 24 ........... .. 68 ______ *9 272 32 _____ 94 598 496 ______ 41C _____ *75 675 367 ______ 172 *41 712 41 ______ *1 26C *4 325 1 466 90 781 ___ 9f 63 10 369 256 ______ 221 ______ 821 60 GrandTotalU.S 7,975 19,966 ♦Under State Supervision Total All Banks 378 17 72 458 934 308 241 59 44 337 562 40 154 1,874 1,080 1,557 1,202 597 291 189 301 470 888 1,226 354 1,466 214 1,069 34 123 576 61 1,252 575 558 1,096 722 270 1,630 53 329 432 571 1,523 11C 106 561 366 345 981 93 Capital 27,192,900 $ 840,000 4.882.400 22,935,700 197,321,928 17,972,000 40,426,737 10,914,585 23,997,930 35.821.500 42,713,760 6,756,810 6,737,500 268,525,390 80,817,471 73,866,300 42.122.500 41,672,815 33,405,990 12,885,800 43.383.200 117,846,280 111,125,735 62,570,000 17,037,930 113,056,400 12,095,000 36.927.200 3,096,600 8,090,000 118,083,300 3,278,000 6,600,218,268 38,904,117 15.372.500 177,366,880 36,714,150 21,796,795 335,507,360 14,240,000 21,892,475 12.479.400 41,489,847 119,509,168 11,577,750 7,826,000 55,932,330 29.617.500 34,945,600 63.820.500 4,500,000 Surplus and Profits Deposits 26,344,050 $ 617,420 3,237,440 15,582,390 161,973,550 16,909,030 107,498,500 18,988,540 22,483,810 31,205,544 37,026,920 6,088,600 3,838,939 276,522,793 62,708,550 47,173,670 28,946,474 41,875,252 26,526,323 31,986,770 78,046,130 305,023,870 120,590,210 48,025,834 13,694,040 86,220,910 7,145,011 21,085,962 1,750,650 24,893,180 176,543,040 1,560,990 3,421,525,956 33-179,579 7,027,873 179,552,219 13,991,366 13,164,370 716,866,729 35,210,930 14,305,530 7,003,770 28,034,880 76,984,988 7,824,090 19,894,030 48,477,212 17,997,850 38,047,201 50,335,750 3,572,290 Other Liabilities 288,460,470 $ 12,402,590 71,338,410 247,390,450 3,336,869,832 328,584,290 1,060,848,710 146,227,420 239,117,150 575,113,114 381,413,740 71,921,320 91,306,770 3,843,722,795 877,864,025 919,715,240 465,535,774 437,608,187 450,138,582 375,585,391 759,049,040 3,670,644,481 1,750,785,229 1,016,465,340 234,731,800 1,336,863,904 155,167,400 487,247,455 40,249,340 250,080,810 2,119,960,180 35,284,230 5,783,219,078 413,417,980 186,616,310 2,515,378,265 472,734,504 287,724,025 5,051,904,480 481,614,540 193.298.380 156,024,670 409,916,810 1,108,498,218 142.952.380 214,342,921 462,640,160 446,869,530 350,449,940 919,843,064 63,276,450 18,579,740 78,850 2,952,720 11,942,020 158,594,990 6,819,210 28,821,070 5,515,960 15.385.780 23,364,090 25,304,380 4,804,090 2,847,240 174,115,586 130,074,280 26,040,312 15,359,230 46.821.780 65,800,310 16,434,080 38,720,020 204,229,150 143,390,330 27,607,830 14,731,009 62,977,090 2,810,323 13,797,160 1,592,500 8,715,470 88,860,550 1,918,580 2,924,154,229 38,871,490 7,012,620 155,291,520 11,303,622 7,659,720 303,972,190 18,817,320 16,256,770 3,720,630 63,349,890 66,079,555 20.136.690 10.505.640 63,984,930 24.441.640 28,323,980 39.992.690 2,201,650 Total Liabilities Loans and Discounts Bonds and Securities $360,577,160 $ 13,938,860 82,410,970 297,850,560 3,854,760,300 370,284,530 1,237,595,017 181,646,505 300,984,670 665,504,248 486,458,800 89,570,820 104,730,449 4,562,886,564 1,151,464,326 1,066,795,522 551,963,978 567,978,034 575,871,205 436,892,041 919,198,390 4,297,743,781 2,125,891,504 1,154,669,004 280,194,779 1,599,118,304 177,217,734 559,057,777 46,689,090 291,779,460 2,503,447,070 42,041,800 18,729,117,531 524,373,166 216,029,303 3,027,588,884 534,743,642 330.344.910 6,408,250,759 549,882,790 246,178,155 179,228,470 542,791,427 1,371,071,929 182.490.910 252,568,591 631,034,632 518,926,620 451,766,721 1,073,992,004 73,550,390 222,551,200 $ 5,053,560 42,109,800 184,684,530 2,277,972,622 169,183,426 690,443,930 89,501,090 173,378,130 346,865,000 313,673,450 50.449.180 51,097,130 2,651,758,563 690,551,217 678,774,795 317,013,520 375,839,489 361,704,480 201,742,070 486,372,140 2,619,621,549 1,046,019,092 600,249,880 166,436,720 897,991,497 82,310,950 346,426,320 27,448,840 132,436,010 1,253,844,224 20,211,690 8,744,279,175 356,152,823 115,778,500 1,851,233,969 244,902,405 162,979,820 3,104,092,390 266,686,250 157,185,010 99,436,786 345.201.180 763,447,420 112,859,635 152,498,810 431,305,780 259,599,460 305,636,560 627,682,061 38,336,640 47,509,198 s 4.893.200 15,544,770 28,147,600 797,977,015 91,971,953 413,337,870 70,100,290 57,893,200 126,297,400 45,973,420 17.184.300 25,183,784 859,781,200 200,336,610 154,642,860 84.534.560 92,608,500 66,705,740 192,926,330 279,328,150 1,110,605,581 679,448,371 317,784,100 45,705,480 310,968,630 47,326,280 70,208,650 7,433,720 138,190,670 901,652,490 9,264,690 5,745,012,539 40,144,630 46,451,810 594,064,299 113.168.560 89,364,190 2,135,131,027 226,046,650 30,677,150 29,778,540 49.158.200 167.997.300 29,212,760 75,396,770 71,501,800 37,003,240 58,829,830 243,731,990 13,057,770 5,195,082,606 $ 66,801,144,086 $ 35,713,010,768 9,282,110,301 $ 6,585,536,005 $ 45,738,415,174 $ J808 28,749 {This does not include corporations, firms and individuals whose names appear herein but which are doing an investment business only. JULY CANADA JULY, 1926 Total, Canadian Banka and Bankers............................ https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 286 239 ........................................ ............................................ ................... . .................................. .................................. .................................. 1,364 30 869 433 3 3,703 $ 17,207,195,667 $ Miscellaneous Cash and Exchanges Due from Banks Total Resources 15,070,846 $ 497,210 6,077,450 13,229,640 193,580,780 10,033,960 38,848,760 7,021,490 23,270,820 22,153,140 25,162,740 6,461,610 5,074,350 189,094,205 87,862,860 55,045,450 24,233,060 17,600,240 38.462.370 13,087,910 35,051,110 138,157,850 109,748,750 43,228,054 11,316,781 61,584,131 7,702,030 28,178,855 2,594,470 5,267,410 95,000,330 2,950,896 809,546,726 25,110,850 14,903,480 156,692,271 25,306,204 15,381,550 320,154,639 14,249,650 16.596.370 10,948,809 46,702,040 76,768,216 6,885,810 9,793,460 41,958,830 27,835,670 24,777,290 40,346,450 3,101,360 75,171,140 $ 3,492,160 18,840,430 71,098,080 584.991.190 98,972,350 94.542.900 15,122,010 46.547.650 170,592,930 100,522,090 15,477,180 22,870,030 861,431,171 170,090,000 173,368,403 123,534,069 81,554,161 108,189,790 29.398.650 118.415.190 422,330,710 289.813.334 190,761,160 56,236,930 326,516,523 40.189.900 110,693,290 8,070,080 16,299,728 237,667,570 9,658,450 3,429,885,039 99,120,810 38,182,520 422,461,528 146,988,402 62,279,630 843,920,390 42,182,190 41,668,879 37,244,850 101,320,620 358.981.335 33,207,360 14,786,050 86,344,150 95,704,140 61,533,800 159,896,662 18,722,020 360,302,384 13,936,130 82,572,450 297,159,850 3,854,521,607 370,061,689 1,237,173,460 181,744,880 301,089,800 665,908,470 485,331,700 89,572,270 104,225,294 4,562,065,139 1,148,840,687 1,061,831,508 549,315,209 567,602,390 575,062,380 437,154,960 919,166,590 4,290,715,690 2,125,029,547 1,152,023,194 279,695,911 1,597,060,781 177,529,160 555,507,115 45,547,110 292,193,818 2,488,164,614 42,085,726 18,728,723,479 520,529,113 215,316,310 3,024,452,067 530,365,571 330,005,190 6,403,298,446 549,164,740 246,127,409 177,408,985 542,382,040 1,367,194,271 182,165,565 252,475,090 631,110,560 520,142,510 450,777,480 1,071,657,163 73,217,790 3,019,709,233 $ 10,786,789,624$ 66,726,705,292 JANUARY. 1927 Alberta.......................................................................................... British Columbia........................................................................ Manitoba...................................................................................... Miquelon.................................................................................... New Brunswick........................................................................... Newfoundland............................................................................. Nova Scotia.............................................................. .................. ......................................................... ......................................................... ......................................................... ......................................................... ......................................................... ................................................................ 283 198 225 2 104 30 Prince Edward Island................................................................ ......................................................... 29 ......................................................... Yukon............................................................................................ ......................................................... ................................................... Total, Canadian Banks and Bankers............................ 440 3 3,692