THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1908. THE COLUMBIAN. SU PPLEM ENP GOVERNMENT GUARANTEE OF BANK DEPOSITS DEBATED AT BEDFORD THE CRUCIAL FEATURE OF THE FINANCIAL PROBLEM DISCUSSED BY HON. JOHN C.M'HENSY AT BEDFORD SPRINGS. Bedford Springs. Ra., Sept. 9 The feature of the second days' session of the Pennsylvania Rankers' Associa tion in annual sesion here, was the ad bess of Hon. J;hn G. Mcdlenry, .T Columbia county, in support of the proposition that the Federal govern ment ought to miarautee deposits in banks. The opposite side of the proposition was supported by Mr. James J- Buchanan. President of the Pittstburg Trust Company, air. "McHenry said: Mr. Chairman and Ceivthmen of ;he j Convention: ' Your accomplished Chairman has invited me to present the argument of the people ill the case of the Banks i. I. IE . . i v wa-rf" ... .. v ' 1 ' '.,- JOHN G. McHENRY. vs. the .people now up for trial be fore this splendid tody of jurymen. The question under debate is: Khali Congress enact a law levying -uiaoiiable tax on National Banks, permitting all banks to avail them selves of the privilege, as an insur ance fund for the protection of the dr positor?" In speaking for the people on the Affirmative side of h':s great quejtion, 1 realize to the fullest extent thatl am addressing a jury of men the majority of whose minds are already adversely fixed. But I respectfully ask that you at least let your minds open to conviction and in a receptive mood to receive my argument. The final solution of this important question tion will iie largely a question of hu man judgment. You may be right, and I may be wrong or I may 'he right and you may be wrong. We are dealing with a fundamental principle and because I may favor it. it does not necessarily follow that I am right ror "because the -big bankers of the country oppose the measure, it does iiO't necessarily follow that they are right, but when the great mass of American pet.ple finally make up their minds urrnii ativ ureat public question. past history r."Cords them always In the right : so it will be will tl:Is quest ion. the final decision, for it is a fundamental q-H-stion and canno r.e d'-eided 1-v mere argument. The Americtiii pipl' as a whole embrace the Cbris-tian reiiaiot:. yet there are many unbelievers whi can marshal ;.ti a-'oiii.diii-z array of facts and e'o ipehce with wh.v tltev consider con- c',iisie pro.-:f that the Christian ! Itgioti i.- ail w: Hit So it will be wi'h lnv V-Ulini:' oppotlllet who is to fol li'A !)! rakitiir -lie neirativi- side of ih' question, whom 1 have no dviubt lun..-stly belives lie is right but you miiM remeiir'aer the "fake" profit idea ba-l; of his argument and the infi delity of his teaching as applied to the banking religion. You have a c-oiidi:i.jn confronting you not a theory. You must ac cept 'rhcr a form of guarantee of le:jxisi! or a Postal Savinsrs Rank. Because the people demand that their earnings shall lie profited. To ar gue that they are already protected is net sufficient. This is a people's Government and after the public mind is fully made up the people al ways get what they want. The pred atory interests and the politicians may thwart the people's wishes for a time but in the end the people will rule. if you choose you may have moulding ihcir final opin hese great financial j 1 1 o s- t :011s and help frame the law but if :" !imv th ill(5if- j .1 ii in-f wuicii cnarac;erioii villi uui- 1 our recent currnecy legislation ou must accept Hit? law as given you and abide by the result. Is It Right and Will It Pay? When the honest legislator is call - d upon to consider a public ques - ion. he has but one predominant bought for bis guidance, is it right? Wheii the banker or business man apporaches any question relating to his business he has but one pre Join- itiant ibouglr: Will it pay? I hope to prove to the satisfaction of both the unbiased Law Maker and the Ranker that a form of Federal Guarantee of bank deposits is not on iy right and sound as a fundamental principle of Ranking economics but that jt w ill pay and I also shall prove that a Postal Sivttt-s Bank, law tin nace to 'he banking 1 interests of the country and to the welfare of cur people. j VO.ee 111 ;i upon : For the intelligent consideration of-1'11'" f"r lne public welfare in c-on-this question, 1 beg your indulgence ' --ving the mutual interests of the that it may be taken up in a system j stockholders, the officers, depositors a:-c way. Ixt us consider briefly: j d borrowers of the c:mmuuity. First, is the Banking business a! Cause of Bank Failures, public or a private business? j Hanks never fail except for one or Second, what is the real mission ! ihrc-e specific causes violation or ue of a Bank? J gleet of the banking laws upon the Third, would a form of Fe.Ioral i'arl of ,tje officers or director8; bad r,, ,t, i I .'nveaunents, which is one cause of a urn nu . 1 u 1 i-taiu nil 11 iiij 1 n.ission if a Bank? Fourth. Will k pay? Is the Ranking Business a public or a private Business? That de pends altogether on how you run your Bank. In the early history of Banking, the business was confined exclusively to men of great wealth who carried on the business of loan ing their own money to the borrow ing pllO.lc. Iter on in the natural evolution of 'he began to receive business. Ranks moneys In trus-t from the poo;!e. So rapidly did the ' b.isimss develop that it was deem-1 ed neci-jisary for the public welfare j that same form of Governmental sl'- pit-vision should be devised until lin- a'ly we have the National Rank act I :i!!.tr:z:nir tae issuimr "I freiierat , charters for the oti' ra'lon of Nation-j til Ranks ;,t:d our several States issu- j ii.y ."a'e diarets for the 1. per. it ion of st-a'e B;inVs. So if you are run- j niim a priva'e Rati I, ai d some of the! le st i,:,i,i'.s I know are private banks, I sitnp.y il-'.nj your not receiving mm. own y oti t lien mom and 1 ile,, the has It. from 1 1 general public Govern- i no con- j leetii. .Valletta! or -: it if lonal rli'ht to :i r v.oa'.i -hey in; Ii r this pt o;io.-ed in'oi-fi re with you rfere witli you un Gnaratitee. If v-.iii are runuiii a pi i v a t Rank wi ll your own money and not with I P'. blic money, then 011r failures or are of no concern to the gen-j era! H'i! asto pub.tc nor to tlie Government. I if. iiiKin the other hand, von have d either the Str-.te or the Fed-1 eial Govern tneni to give you cl.il chtirti't- and are nceivlng a spe money on deposit from the genera! public, ih n your Rank immediately bifomes a public institution and the Govern m -ii ; issuing your cliartcr owes a ni-tral obligation to the public to snr n mid t.he business with su b sttfe gitards as will insure the public asainst loss. In this connection and under this head I want to answer in advance one of the arguments which my op - 110111 nt will produce, and that I.-, Why Not Guarantee All Lines of Buisness? lie will argue that if the Govetn nient is to guarantee the Hanking IJu-iness why not guarantee the 'bus iness of the merchant, the manufac turer, and the farmer. The absur dity of this form of argument carries with ii its own rebuttal as being un- worthy of earnest, consideration. I'nder a form of Federal Guarantee o1 the overnmetit does not guarantee the ; Hanking P.tisiness it does not re- ; merely requires the Rank to return 'ihe Depositors' money any time they j call for it by levying a reasonable : tax upon the Ranks for that purpose, It puts the Ranks in a pnsition to ' n; any demand their dejiosllors may maki1 I Important, and that wnicn is most removes the dangerous ! elements of fear and distrust from the depositors mini which at the same j time, removes h's desire to withdraw his deposits more rapidly than he needs them in his daily use. Tile Covernnient would never pay a dollar out of the People's Treasury but would simply act as a Trustee to r.'Ci-ie and ilis'iurs this insurance fund. .:: s tlie f.i'tner or tile merchant or :!,! matin r.ii-t ur'r receive a N'a tieii.il char'er frcm the Gover:inien. til-it the love rn.'in should guarantee bis litisiness? No. Why have you NaMof.al Rankers asked for a Feder al charier? Recause you believe it t. is tin advantage ft r you to do so and because you iielieve it inspires great- or cor.fideuc upon the part of the public. The great structure of the Rat kirg Business of the country Is built upon confidence. Any law or any condition which helps to in crease publi - confidence by surround-; ing the business with fundamental ; ,,., ,)tJ country contributes his: safeguards is a good law and will I of hat 111 towar 1 the country,, work a grttit lwnefi.: not only to the,,., .am:i;i be- cetisunsl. for the: country lint will bring ab.iut greater ;.-ifi:s to the bunks themselves. Flirllieiiiiiee, the inerclitilit. the 111:111-iif.it-t ill er or lb'- farne r may fail, but u- failure lias to do only with him-' -ell' and his immediate red i tors but' win 11 a Rank fails it involves the st: ckliolib s. !. .'.-fo-itors and the brjrinpps :t:tcrv-'.i :l:v t holt; c.'lii-' munitv. Willi the iss "tof a federal char- j n r autlic: i?;n" . to establish a; ti.itional iai.:w a' :nes is no' longer a j-rtva'e htiitie.-s but be- ' !.". s a . V h.ivc i atked for the ( barer because you j iielieve it wil; insure greater profits . to you as stockholders. Therefore it is but fair, right and equitable that ;he government shall act as a me- hundred or embezzlement upon the part of the cashier or-officers. In either of these cases a failure might have been prevented by a close sur veillance upon the part of the Gov ernment. This being true, I hold that the Government is, to a certain extent, an accessory before the fact ii,, every national bank failure, and:1 ! ;he United States Government should 'tither withdraw entirely from the I i banking business OR ASSUME ITS 1 : rigals ana prmtegeb ..,,,1 1,v .Ml.-ird lis? ii- business in the interest ' tlie 1 ilic welfare still more closely. Tile national banking business of !!iis c lun'.ry is operated upon a strict ly sclent ilie basis and properly offi ce, -d and the present laws lived up th'-re is no reasonable excuse fof : ny national hank failure, and in ail ic liistoty of American banking we i.a-n- yi l to record the first failure ( f any national bank where tile laws ".axe bein ligidly observed. A Bank That as Once Eeen Success ful Should Never Be Closed. R. 11. ks wili make bad loans and ..tit with losses ju.-t the same as a i.iauul'aeiurer or merchant will make . ad sales and have bis losses, but j v. here a bank is so located as to slip ; ;i public m-cessity and with a I line nf ilep.isi's to make it profitable there is no tea.-on under the sun why itiiat bank should cIos- its doors, and J under tlie operation of my projiosed !'ij! tnere will never in: any more I i iiiin l.iiiiiieb 01 misj-iisioiij.. Tlie ajiplicat ion of the proposed law would work with automatic and .scientific, precision, a.i 1 if losses have been sustained to tlie extent of impairing the surplus and capital of a nank. the Comptroller has it in his p.er to remove the cause and. In stead of closing the doors, the banks t:o on doing business. There has nt vf r yet in en a bank failure within the limit of my observation or knowl edge, but. the cause of the t failure being removed, the business 1 reorganized, public confidence restor. 1 ed, the bank has invariably recover- 1 i ed j;s losses and continued as a d!v- nU-ml paying proposition to its stock holders. A most striking pxctr of this truth is found in the recent Knickerbocker Trust Company sus pension which closed by the arbi trary action of a clearing house committee, and within eight months j ;s found ;u ;, solvent condition and ;s ow ,ijng a prosperous business ! wi;n pearly f. ny million of deposits. ln providing a Government guaran- j r .... lluiri. M'lllllil IIAV.M ti.i i II flltlti- tiontil tax levied to meet any loss. I ordinary withdrawal of deposits, and : t(J on as t;1(. banker can rely with j ;l reasonable degree of certainty j ti,.lt his demisiis will remain at a ; normal state he can tell with very j r..a. accurac y just how for lie can j extend i,js accommodations to the i ,,,,,1,311; and manufacturer and gen- oral borrower, and thus increase his earning capacity to the fullest ; jj,,, ne cau tojj wnat Joans can "... S if.i'v .-.ill f.Wfl.l O .1 well as what Our re- i'lK-w loans can be made j ent panic, as far as the country at j targe is concerned, was caused more by fright upon ilie part of the bank er than upon the part of the deposl The average banker is not only tin honest man. but a man of -the h'.-'he.-.t character in his community ami one who prides himself upon be ing able to give his depositors their !i!i.cv when they ask for it. So, .ill' n a condition of panic exists each e. iiM rxutiw bunker wants to keep bis own ins-'t it tr i'.n strong, and is , , , to call in outstanding loans, ancj t0 refuse to grant any new loans. . while in many cases there is no real . j::!iifi,,itii.ii for this procedure, and ;; . ; ,-, i; hstanding the harm he works 1 his individual community and as ntegral part of the hanking eys- tea-oii that he does n;i 01. liis t'e.o?l:ois 111. t e, and l;t.e up in fiotll know how ! be frighten , !' his win- j I , demanding cash, so a foi'iii of I t gi:ara:e w'nieh will ..albfy the ih-j insoi.r under any and all conditions; ... , ... .1 s iiet as essential tor me oeneni o' 1 e hanker as ii is for the deposits fair interests of the borrower. la tlie individual management of u:i incorporated hank and ;iie laws which govern ... '!u-re arc four sepa i,iii' ;..-(..-3a he cinserveii. viz: The Govern liietit titer ui ;a'e. ttie sio'Ktioiaers, ine ae;osi- ors and -the borrowers. Under our modern . system of banking there seems to have developed a new type ! of bank managi r who believes that the sole right in a 0ank is centered entirely within the stockholder. This type may jusitly be styled the Wall Street Ranker. jmi filled are they with the "divine right" idea that Rankers of this ciass look upon their deposits as their own money and therefore for their exclusive benefit. They chafe under any and all governmental re straint and are usually opposed to any form of banking legislation that looks to the welfare of the depositor and borrower. This principle seems to underlie every financial measure which has been favorably considered 1 i v tlie last session of Congress and - 4 '"t "KSiy exenipnneu i,y me dis. ingilished Senator from Rhode Is- .and. the Republican leader in the Senate, the author ot the Aldrlcn- 1 ' " ' Rill, the sole arbiter of American Legislation, in his speech, in delivire.l in the Senate on 'March 20, Rei.v Congressional Record. page 11. -.1'. I In discussing the question of a Fed eral guarantee of bank deposits, he ' said: "The peo;ile of I he Stales of the ' I'nioii are not in'erested in this ques iieii. They are not the depositors. I refer to the common people. The . i.'opb- who deposit in the banks and he people who borrow the resources ' f the banks are business men who .an take care of themselves, and there is no reason why we should run uad in Jiis idea of paternalism." 1 I submit in all fairness to you men as practical bankers that if any bank r v.nuhi come before you and make a similar statement, "that the jteople -. f the states of tlie I'nioii are not Interested iu this question, that they are not deposit :irs," you would be forc ed -o admit that he didn't Lne .'. ttie I .0. ini.try principh s underlying true , banking success ami thai if lie did j n il understand the primary princi- j i.e.-.; he would not be fit to partici-i ji-iio in bank management much less become tlie sole maker of laws et'.'.rtng the currency and banking li.o'stjons of the great American peo-1 pie. Yet it is this type of 'bankers '!:; now oppose a Federal Guarantee ami vou cannot disguise the fact that yr.ur opposition is not based upon ound economic principles but Is 'ounded lijxiti absolutely selfish mo tives. The true mission of a liauk is one of pteblie good. It presents the true TpTT-iT- of scientific co-operation. An lionestlv managed bank helps men tonore become insolvent under the law. I help themselves and when a bank is established in a community it should be so organized and managed ! i and the stock so widely distributed i preserve to each state ibank and each ! unsound as a bank (principle, that the greatest number may share j national bank its own individuality; Wild Cat Banking, in its profits anil 'bring to the bank I and its own control under its sepa-; As to the question of this proposed the widest possible degree of public j rate charter, it will be a good law j law encouraging wild-cat banking, it confidence, hence any antional law ! and work to the benefit of th gen-1 will have the opiiosite effect, because which will further the true mission eral. banking business. There should j each bank in a community will then of a bank such as a Federal Guaran- j '-e some law to d-emand an uniform j have an interest in every other bank tee of leK)sits is a law in 1he in-j percentage of reserves in all banks i and will he on guard as to its own teest of the public welfare and one I and an uniform percentage of undi- affairs as well as its neighbor's af that will increase the profits of the j vided surplus in addition to the cap- j fairs. The same argument would be . links as well. ( Would a Form of Federal Guarantee i Help, or Retard the True Mis- . sion of a Bank? j When men organize a bank, their j ! 1. r r,t find, however, that in addition to 1 .. . , 1 f, k,: it nlv in creases their profits but increases I a"e national bank losses have the usefulness of the bank as a com- i not weeded $850,000. My proposed munitv builder. Idle money in a i W" wnicn a ,ax of two mil,s '. ,-i;i. mpn i nn!1,Ion ,h? ,a'l'al stock provides a economic loss io a enmmunity. Idle j money is one of the principle causes of idle men for it takes money to env j ploy men. Therefore, no community witt rise to its hi-bes desrree of: . . , , , , " , ,, final. cial and mora! development tin- the money of tile community is t;ei: i-i n't reiitiil inn I: i estiniat .-! tint there is one billion dollars . !hat ,he p"bIic mini1 wouId not con-' This reecnt agitation for reform. f idle nionev money hidden at j S"ler " as a sumc'ent tax to give , j,iging from actual results, has 'been h .me and not in circulation, which I thm ,hP P'ection which they want.lls,H, nl0re as a pmical asset than would represent four billion dollars witn ,!le average bank of a hun-; for the accomplishment or real good of additional commercial credits. ! ,rH' thousand capital, a two mill an-j-to the masses, and has included with Now isn't ii better to try to get and i "ilal ,ax wo'd mean a tax of $200 . in its realms various attacks upon the t:eep this hidden money which Is ',f,r 'ear- Xow counting the net, general banking business.' True, -eal money into circulation than to !'ror'f w n'eh yon make on your dopos- linen in high places have proved faith- ry the dangerous experiment of is-: its- a,'Pr deducting all fixed charges I less to the trust and confidence im- suing a new kind of money as provid" fd under the Aldrich-Vreeland Rill, at a high rate. of tax which means a' .'.x upon production? Before nu n will put their money I into a hunk they must first have con- i'uli r.ce in the management of 4he ' nstitiition. So long as times are . , , 1 ,..1 ..,.! 1 .11. 1.11! nmiil t inn tir.iinnl .1. ami iiii.hii' -i-i ,it.... , . , , uiiilisturiied tiiev; are saiisneu anu willing to leave their money remain 11 di-iKiwit. but even under the most I , j favorable eondit ions, there is a large - -TTTlTTT-r. TtTtmhfT ;-f -nP7i1 r1ft-T ' r f pmr.rr.TiTirrT j who are afraid to trust their savings j ! iu any bank and those who have al- j ! ready deposited their savings are i afraid the moment there is talk of a panic or a -business depression, and deposits. In the removal of this fear in the public mind lies the great necessity for a Federal Guarantee. As far as actual losses are concerned in the fast the percentage of losses to de positors and to -the general public has been less, perhaps, than any oth fr pirblic loss in other lines of busi ness hut a law of this kind is not intended either for the profit or the bank or for the profit of the individ ual but it is intended as a economic factor for the public good. If Mr. Aldrieh is right in his statements, and you men who bow before the shrine of Wall Street in following his leadership, unite In Re lieving that the people are not de positors in the .banks, that the banks ton't need the deposits of the peo ple, then I am wrong and you are right, but if upon the other hand you !o need the money of the people to tarry on your business and if the people have a right ro withdraw that money when they choose and destroy your business, it seems to me to be pi 1 unanswerable argument that a Federal Guarantee of Deposits wil! help further the true mission of the hank and in so doing help ad ranee the interests of tlie great American . onle for both go hand in hand. Will It Pay? Now we come to that part of the question which appeals to you as practical bankers more than the ques tion of public good will it pay? Dur ing tlie recent session of Congress I had the honor to prepare and pre sent a Bill, a copy of which I mailed to each batik iu Pennsylvania and with which you are 110 doubt famil iar. The Rill provides a semi-annual tax upon the capital stock of the one tenth of one percent or a two mill tax a year upon ca-pital stock of each year upon capital stock of each bank. My bill alos permits state ..anks to participate in the benefits by submitting to the same laws gov erning national banks as applied to xaminations, publication of reports, reserves and surplus fund. It should also 1 iuW the maximum :i mount of interest on time deposits. ..'hat we need in banking legislation a greater unanimity and uniformity of bank nianagt ment. One state for instance will have a law fixing five per cent, of law ful reserves, another will have 10 per cent., another 15. while all na tional banks are compelled to carry 1." and 2. per cent, lawful reserves. In a time of panic t.he 'burden or sup port falls largely upon the national hank reserves and the drains upon j them are such that they cannot main- ' tain their lawful reserve and there-1 If any federal law can be framed i such as is proposed, to help amalga- mate the banking business and yet , ital and a maximum rate of interest n deposits. A bank failure is worse than a fire it not only incurs a di rect loss but it involves a still I Sreater indiret loss ,0 the alk j and community through the loss o 1 1 -e and the arousing or those destructive elements in men of fear ian(1 distrust. Since 1SC3 the aver- fund of Two Million Dollars annual-! 1 Iy or about two and a half times as i I "much money as past experience has ' proved we need. I agree that It would be more fair to have this tax j ' ,nr luil "ae lui3 I -based upon deposits instead of upon i 11 1 I capital stocs, out ir based upon ue-, 1 -posits it would seem so insignificant . .ncluding your depositors interest 1 posed in them by their business as ictount. at one per cent., your sociates and by the general public, bank would have to secure an In-! Isolated cases of this kind always creased amount of deiposits of twen-ihave existeii and always will exist. :y thonsand dollars or increase its I There is one elemen.t of good, how- I loaning capacity to the extent of 5."..h:o either way you want it. 'c and this general business reorga il ls there any banker here who isllzatiun. Corporate nianagement of I ailtilf tl llk'llff. ttlA LtiFbTiianl Dtll ... .... ,nai iiti ii. miui I ! lie ibelieves he cannot increase his deposits upon the ratio of $20,000 per J10O.1M.O capital or that he cannot in- 1 crease his ioaninsr ranacitv to the extent, of io.tM wheu.h.is bank is ' . .ackel .by a federal guarantee to de- positors and he knows that he is not going to have any extraordinary demand from his depositors for their 1 money. 1 . V Hue. ...j l'' ' ' ... ' meat and associated banks are first I . . . . 1 1 . v : . 1 , 1 . . """"' I ment; seCond' b tne surPlus d un" divided profits; third, by the stock holders' liaibility representing three times the capital stock, and I should like to ask if any banker here knows of any hanking institution anywhere that he would not be willing today to take Its business over upon that basis. This is what we propose un- tier my tbill. Instead or liquidating the affairs of a bank and creating losses we continue the business with out drawing a dollar from the Na tional Treasury, and apply the earn ings of the bank to repay the losses before the stockholders get any divi dends. As a husiness proposition I know that you would the willing to t?ke over the banking husiness or ;he country today upon that basis, and especially so would yon take it over ir you could have the privilege which you have under this bill of ex amining the conditions or the bank before it is permitted to receive this cuarantee. The general average of bank stock dividends or net earnings throughout the lnite4 States is 13 :ter cent, annually. The annual tax provided herein is two mills on the capital stock. So the argument against the tax falls in the evidence of past history and our general knowledge of the banking husiness. Rut even suppose j paying line of business it is just as the banks were obliged to bear this j Ima?h of an economic waste to close small tax. if it can be shown to be in 1 ,,, the iank an, destroy its patron the interest of the public welfare, j a?.e as it wouUi fl) 4lllrn (lown a the tax would be justifiable. Though it would seem to be 'beyond all argu ment and the widest possible stretch of imagination that the bankers would not receive through the in- creased deposits which wouUl come privileges through which they can Into their vaults liecause of a guar- j n,.,I;e Vtrv i.lrp prints and yet re antee of this kind and a larger loan-, fllst. to ....mrihtue their share to Itig and earning capacity because of' v.,r, the maintenance of their gov- more steady volume of deposits, suf ficient to increase their net earnings very much greater .than any possible tax which might be imposed. There fi re. I claim that a Federal Guar antee will nol only work to the pub lic good 'but llie benefit of all banks and I challenge my opponent to pro duce astisfa,ctoiy evidence to the contrary. Well Street A jument Agamst De- 1(0rne ly slllt,M,llv So , 0r positoi ; Guarantee. American government the burden of In his effort to produce the evl-i this social and economic life is dls dence in answt r to my challenge and : trihuted throughout all stratas of so in addition to bis claim that if the;ciety through the medium of taxa- government should guarantee business it sh uld guarantee one all, which I have already answered, my opponent will urge that it will en- courage and increase 'wild cat" bank-1 ing. .Second, that it is unfair to tax good banks for the loss of poor ones. Third, that it will give the smajl 'bank an unfair advantage. 'Fourth, that it is paternalism and just as reasonable as applied against life insurance, that a man would be more disregardful of his health ibe- cause his life is insured, or It could be allied to fire insurance, that a man would he more careless of his property because his property was in" sured. If business history teaches us. anything, we have learned that In surance is a fundamental and eco nomic principle, and the question of this insurance is not so much to pre vent the loss as to prevent the wid? spread of harm -which comes from a loss of this character, and the oppo- sition of banks to this bill is not he- cause of a fear, of loss to themselves. hut because of a selfish fear of com- petitors' possible gain, Fewer Bank Losses in Future Than in the Past. 1 ever, which will come from this pan- 'ill L-tt..lo u-ht..v nr.t.Ttn.1 n tn.1... . .111 niiiit.-i, nil. nil i x .LJl iru I VI lliu U' i t rial pursuits or to the general hank- ing business, will h cleaner and or i higher personal order than at any time in tlie past, and that, too, with out any change whatever in existing laws. Ijosses through national 'bank fail ures will be less in the future than they have been in the 'past. 'Men are growing better, and the standard of t --. .-. ,u. .., UUi.'Ua '.. l.aSita of business men is higher today than ever before. It is impossible, there fore, to concede that (because the pos sibility of loss is removed from his depositors the banker Is going to take greater risks 'than he ever did before. The 'banker of the present day has no thought ct the depositors" loss at all. lie is concerned entirely and solely for his stockholders, and, knowing as he does that before the : government can supply the loss to his depositors that he must first give ip the earned surplus of his bank and call upon the stockholders or hi? bank to pay an assessment of 100 per cenif. upon their stock, the same degree of conservatism will exist as berore, and more so, for the reason that the Comptroller of the Currency will have authority to re-move any of ficer or director from any bank whose conduct has been in direct op position to the best Interest or the bank. Unfair to Tax Good Banks for the Fairure of Poor Banks. I believe I have already answered the argument which my opponent will produce that it is unfair to tax good banks for the losses due to bad hank management. I have tried to show that there is no excuse for any bank failure. That there always have been and always will .be bank losses. But where a bank has once had a factory because a certain factory manager had robbed the Treasury. But, are bankers to he a specially fa vored class of men who first want a government to give them special eminent or the prosperity of our leople? In this scheme of human govern ment each citizen assumes his share of responsibility. Who supports our hospitals, our insati-- asylums, our homes for indigent persons? The people. Every personal or business failure in life means that the bur- , di n of 1 lie loss of that failure must tion. The banking business being a i j public business, it is better for the j public good that the iburden or loss if losses there may be, shall be dis trihuted throughout and rest with