SAVINGS BANKS
While of National importance, savings banks are chartered by the
respective states in which they exist, and as such are distinctly
local institutions.
Unlike the National, the savings bank is not established as a
money-making corporation.
The ostensible and actual purpose of the savings bank is to
encourage people of small means to save.
The savings bank provides a safe place for the care of such
deposits, and it pays such rates of interest on such deposits as
are warranted by the earnings of its investments after paying the
expenses incident to the proper conduct of its officers.
When a savings bank receives authorization to act, through a
charter from the state, the organizers choose a board of directors
and the proper officers.
Usually the officers occupying positions of trust and
responsibility are required to give bonds for the proper discharge
of their duties.
HOW BUSINESS IS CONDUCTED
With all the legal conditions complied with, and a suitable office
provided, the savings bank is ready for business.
Some savings banks will receive on deposit any sum from five cents
to five thousand dollars.
Other banks will not receive less than one dollar at a time, nor
more than a thousand.
We have heard of "penny savings banks," but they are rarely
chartered, and are organized, only to encourage thrift among
children.
Fractional parts of a dollar are not usually reckoned as drawing
interest.
Some banks require as much as three, four or five dollars before
allowing interest.
Savings banks in the eastern states pay from three to four per
cent. In the west it is sometimes as high as six.
Each bank has certain dates at which calculation of interest
begins. As a rule this is January 1st, April 1st, July 1st, and
October 1st.
Money deposited at any time between these dates does not draw
interest till the beginning of the next quarter.
But never mind the interest.
The best time to make a deposit is when you have the money.
The bank is safer than your pocket.
HOW TO DEPOSIT
Count your money carefully and make a memorandum of the amount
before giving to the savings bank to deposit.
Hand the money to the officer--usually "the receiving teller"--
authorized to receive it.
The teller writes down the name, age, occupation and residence of
the depositor.
If money is deposited in the name of one under legal age, the
names of the parents and the birthplace of the minor are also
recorded.
The adult depositor must write his name in a book provided by the
bank for the signature of clients.
When these conditions are complied with, the depositor receives a
memorandum book, known as a "deposit book", in which, with his
name and date, is written the amount of his first deposit.
The deposit book must be carefully guarded, for without its
presentation at the savings bank money cannot be drawn. You cannot
check against your savings bank account, as with a commercial
bank.
HOW THE ACCOUNT GROWS
After the first account is opened the rest is easy.
On the second, as on all subsequent visits, the deposit book, with
the amount to be entered, is handed to the receiving teller. He
counts the money, makes a record of it for his own use, enters it
on your book as a deposit, and hands the book back. That is all.
Whenever interest is due it is written down in the book as if it
were a cash deposit.
The interest, if desired, will be paid in cash, but if allowed to
remain, it begins at once to earn interest for itself.
Interest grows like a rolling snow ball. On such small beginnings
great fortunes have been built.
Savings banks keep a reserve, made up of earnings in excess of
interest and all expenses.
This reserve earns money.
The money so earned is reckoned as a net profit, and it may be
distributed, and usually is, among its depositors as a "dividend."
THE LIMIT OF DEPOSIT
Different banks have different limits of deposit, that is fixed
sums beyond which they will not receive.
The limit is from one thousand to five thousand dollars.
When the fortunate depositor has reached the limit with one
savings bank, there is no law to prevent his opening another
account with another, or with any number of similar banks.
Remember the savings banks are not meant for capitalists, but for
small depositors.
After deposits and interests have reached a total of $1,600, the
interest will not go on earning interest, but will be regarded
simply as a deposit.
This is in compliance with law.
Depositors, posted as to the law, open another account with
another bank, and keep on till the interest limit is reached.
HOW TO DRAW MONEY
A savings bank depositor may either draw money himself or through
some properly authorized person.
This is the method:
The deposit book is presented to the paying teller. The owner
states the sum he wants to draw.
Having assured himself that the bearer of the book is the right
person, the teller takes a receipt in a book kept for the purpose,
for the amount, enters the same on the right hand or debit side of
the book, and hands out the money.
There is a form of authorization for another to draw, printed on
the deposit book. This must be copied and its directions complied
with.
Most banks will not allow depositors to draw out less than a fixed
sum, say $5.00.
This saves trouble, and prevents thoughtless depositors from going
to the bank every time they want a dollar.
Before a depositor can draw a large sum from a savings bank he may
be compelled, under the law, to give from one week to six weeks'
notice of his intention.
This provision may not prevent a run on the bank, but it gives the
managers time to provide for it.
Read the rules in the deposit book.