18.7.19

BUSINESS TIPS FOR MEN AND WOMEN

BUSINESS TIPS FOR MEN AND WOMEN

INTRODUCTION

What is a good business man? "The rich man," you may answer. No,the good business man is the man who knows business.Are you a good business man?"Up to the average," you say.Well, what do you know of business laws and rules, outside yourpresent circle of routine work?Now, this handy little volume is a condensation of the rules andthe laws which every man, from the day laborer to the banker,should be familiar with.We have not put in everything about business, for that wouldrequire a library, instead of a book that can be read in a shortday, and be consulted for its special information at any time.It isn't a question of the price of the book to you, or of theprofit to the publisher. Is it good?Many a man has failed because he did not know the rules and lawsherein given.Never a man has won honestly who did not carry out these rules andlaws.

9.4.11

Searching for a mortgage company to find a No Credit Mortgage

Searching for a mortgage company online can help you to get a home loan even with bad credit. Bank turndowns are avoided when you apply online with a mortgage broker. You also can compare multiple financing offers to ensure you are getting a good deal when you have poor credit. You can find a no credit mortgage online with research.
To get the most out of your online mortgage search, here are some tips:
1. Find out about The Loan Process for NO CREDIT MORTGAGEs.
Don't be a victim- find the right lenders. Educate yourself about the loan process by reading articles on finance and mortgage websites. You will find out what fees and interest rates you can expect to pay for a no credit loan, as well as the type of financing that will best meet your needs when you have bad credit.
2. Apply For several mortgages.
There are two types of mortgage applications that you can find online when you are searching for a no credit mortgage.  One is a generic estimate based on limited information such as your income, bills, and credit history. This is similar to the rates posted at the front of a bank, and they are a great way to compare mortgage lenders, but not a rate you can rely on to get a no credit mortgage.
To get a real quote, you will need to fill out detailed information since there are so many factors besides income that determines your mortgage rate. If you have a FICO score of less than 600, you will be required to put down at least 5%. Here's a hint - to qualify for a lower rate, increase your down payment amount.
3. Compare The True Loan Cost
Looking at interest rates shouldn't be the only way you compare costs. Closing fees, loan application fees, or fees by any other name can add thousands to your loan. To determine the cost of your loan add the amortization and loan costs, and you will find that a mortgage lending website has an amortization calculator to make this easy.
4. Follow Up On Your Loan Application every few days.
Once you have picked a lender, you can finish the mortgage process by applying online, but please don't forget about the application.  Always keep all records from the mortgage lender and make regular phone calls to ensure the no credit mortgage is processed on time.
5. When To Refinance- after you close your loan.
After you have completed your mortgage, you can begin to plan to refinance after three years when you have established good credit. Make regular payments and reduce your short-term debt to maximize your credit rating for lower interest rates in the future, and be sure to always pay your no credit mortgage.

15.11.10

BAD CREDIT PERSONAL LOAN

DO YOU NEED A PERSONAL LOAN FOR BAD CREDIT?
 
Do you need a cash loan to pay your bills, take a vacation, remodel your home, start a business, or use for any other expense? Whatever your financial need, a personal loan can help. Personal loan providers can give you an instant cash loan regardless of an imperfect credit history – often within hours of receiving your application. The following are the top personal loans for people with a bad credit rating, along with links to their easy online applications.
 
- QUICK APPROVALS
- LOW COST LOANS
- GREAT RATES

7.9.10

You can get APPROVED for a BAD CREDIT LOAN

If you are looking for a loan, and you have bad credit, you can now get approved.  There are many new programs available at
For approval of bad credit.  Stated income loans are also available.  Flexible lending, fast approvals.

22.10.09

BUSINESS TIPS FOR MEN AND WOMEN


INTRODUCTION



What is a good business man? "The rich man," you may answer. No,
the good business man is the man who knows business.

Are you a good business man?

"Up to the average," you say.

Well, what do you know of business laws and rules, outside your
present circle of routine work?

Now, this handy little volume is a condensation of the rules and
the laws which every man, from the day laborer to the banker,
should be familiar with.

We have not put in everything about business, for that would
require a library, instead of a book that can be read in a short
day, and be consulted for its special information at any time.

It isn't a question of the price of the book to you, or of the
profit to the publisher. Is it good?

Many a man has failed because he did not know the rules and laws
herein given.

Never a man has won honestly who did not carry out these rules and
laws.


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CHAPTER I

COMMON SENSE FARMING



The three things essential to all wealth production are land,
labor, and capital.

"The dry land" was created before there appeared the man, the
laborer, to work it. With his bare hands the worker could have
done nothing with the land either as a grazer, a farmer or a
miner. From the very first he needed capital, that is, the tools
to work the land.

The first tool may have been a pole, one end hardened in the fire,
or a combined hoe and axe, made by fastening with wythes, a
suitable stone to the end of a stick; but no matter the kind of
tool, or the means of producing it, it represented capital, and
the man who owned this tool was a capitalist as compared with the
man without any such appliance.

From the land, with the aid of labor and capital, comes wealth,
which in a broad way may be defined as something having an
exchangeable value.

Before the appearance of money all wealth changed hands through
barter. The wealth in the world to-day is immeasurably greater
than all the money in it. The business of the world, particularly
between nations, is still carried on through exchange, the
balances being settled by money.

Money is a medium of exchange, and should not be confounded with
wealth or capital; the latter is that form of wealth which is used
with labor in all production.

Broadly speaking, wealth is of two kinds, dormant and active. The
former awaits the development of labor and capital, the latter is
the product of both.

Labor is human effort, in any form, used for the production of
wealth. It is of two kinds--skilled and unskilled. The former may
be wholly mental, the latter may be wholly manual.

The successful farmer must be a skilled laborer, no matter the
amount of his manual work. The unskilled farmer can never succeed
largely, no matter how hard he works.

Trained hands with trained brains are irresistible.

Too many farmers live in the ruts cut by their great-great-
grandfathers. They still balance the corn in the sack with a
stone.

Farming is the world's greatest industry. All the ships might be
docked, all the factory wheels stopped, and all the railroads
turned to streaks of rust, and still the race would survive, but
let the plow lie idle for a year and man would perish as when the
deluge swept the mountain tops.

The next census will show considerably over 6,000,000 farms in the
United States. Farming is the greatest of all industries, as it is
the most essential. Our Government has wisely made the head of the
Department of Agriculture a cabinet officer, and the effect on our
farming interest is shown in improved methods and a larger output
of better quality.

The hap-hazard, unskilled methods of the past are disappearing.
Science is lending her aid to the tiller of the soil, and the wise
ones are reaching out their hands in welcome.

BUSINESS METHODS NEEDED

As farming is our principal business, it follows that those who
conduct this vast and varied enterprise should be business men.

The farmer is a producer of goods, and so might be regarded as a
manufacturer,--the original meaning of the word is one who makes
things by hand. He is also a seller of his own products, and a
purchaser of the products of others, so that, to some extent, he
may also be regarded as a trader or merchant.

Enterprise and business skill are the requisites of the
manufacturer and merchant. Can the farmer succeed without them?

No business can prosper without method, economy, and industry
intelligently applied.

No man works harder the year round than does the American farmer,
yet too many are going back instead of advancing. In such cases it
will be found that there is enough hard work for better results,
and that the cause of failure is that the industry has not been
properly applied, and that economy has had no consideration.

Economy does not mean niggardliness, or a determination to get
along without tools that your neighbor has purchased. A neglect to
secure the best tool needed might be classed as an extravagance, a
waste, if the tool in question could have added to the quality and
quantity of the output, without the expenditure of more labor.

Business common-sense is taking the place of old-fashioned
conservatism and scientific methods are no longer sneered at as
"book-farming."


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CHAPTER II

DOCUMENTS EVERY FARMER SHOULD UNDERSTAND



All property implies an owner. Property is of two kinds, real and
personal. The former is permanent and fixed, the latter can be
moved.

Every occupant of realty holds it through a deed, which carries
with it sole ownership, or through a lease which carries with it
the right to occupation and use in accordance with the conditions
as to time and the amount to be paid, set forth in the written
instrument.

A deed carries with it sole ownership, a lease covers the right of
use for a fixed period.

AS TO DEEDS

The purchaser of real estate, say a farm, should receive, from the
person selling the property, a written instrument, or conveyance
known as a deed.

The deed must show clearly that the title to or interest in the
property has been transferred from the seller to the buyer.

Before the deed is signed and delivered, the buyer should know
that he is getting a clear title to the property described in the
conveyance.

In order to insure the accuracy of the title and thus avoid
subsequent complications and perhaps lawsuits, the paper should be
submitted to some good lawyer, or other person acquainted with
real estate law and the methods by which titles are traced from
the first owner to the present possessor.

TITLE ABSTRACTS

In all the great business centers of the United States there are
Title Guarantee Companies, who for a consideration--to be paid by
the seller--furnish an abstract of title, and insure its validity.

In smaller places the local lawyers know how to make up an
abstract and one should be employed. Never trust the search of the
inexperienced.

An abstract of title is a memorandum taken from the records of the
office where deeds are recorded, and showing the history of the
title from the Government up to the present time.

The seller should furnish the buyer with a certificate from the
proper county officer, showing whether or not all taxes have been
paid up to the last assessment.

In addition to this, before the money is paid and the deed
accepted, the purchaser should be satisfied that there are no
mortgages, liens, attachments or other claims against the
property.

If such claims exist and are known to the buyer, he may assume
them as a condition of the sale.

PARTIES TO A DEED

The person selling the land and making the deed is known in law as
the Grantor. The person buying the property is known as the
Grantee.

A deed is a form of contract, and in order to have its terms and
statements binding on the maker, he must be twenty-one years of
age, or over, and he must be of sound mind.

The grantee need not be twenty-one, nor of sound mind in order to
make the terms of the deed binding on the grantor.

In some states, if the grantor be a married man, his wife must
sign the deed with him. This should be seen to, for without the
wife's signature the grantee will not have a clear title, for the
woman could still claim an interest in the property equal to her
dower right.

Also, if the grantor is a woman, her husband, for the reasons
given, should join with her in the execution of the deed.

The preparation of a deed should not be left to the unskilled.

DIFFERENT DEEDS

There are three kinds of deeds, viz.: General warranty deeds,
special warranty deeds, and quit-claim deeds.

The general warranty deed, if it can be had, is the one every
purchaser should get.

In the general warranty deed the grantor agrees for himself, "his
heirs, executors, administrators, and assigns," that at the time
of making the deed he is lawfully in possession, "seized" is the
legal term, of the estate described in the deed, that it is free
from all incumbrance, and that he will warrant and defend the
grantee and his heirs and assigns against all claims whatsoever.

In the quit-claim deed the grantor conveys to the purchaser his
interest in or right to the property under consideration.

The quit-claim grantor does not guarantee the title to the
property, nor warrant the grantee against any other claims. He
simply, by the deed, quits his claim to the property.

The special warranty deed covenants and warrants only against the
acts of the grantor and those claiming title under him.

MAKING A DEED

After a deed is properly drawn, it is ready to be signed, sealed,
and delivered to the grantee.

If the wife of the grantor is to sign, her name should follow that
of her husband.

If one or both cannot write, the signature can be made in this
way:

His
George X Jones.
Mark.

Witness..............


In some states one or more witnesses are required to the signature
of the grantor; in others, witnesses are not necessary, except
where a "mark" is made.

An important part of a deed is the Acknowledgment. This is the act
of acknowledging before a notary public, justice or other official
properly qualified to administer an oath, that the signatures are
genuine and made voluntarily.

The acknowledgment having been taken, the official stamps the
paper with his seal and signs it.

In some states the law requires that a wax or paper seal be
attached to the paper, while in others a circular scroll, made
with the pen, with the letters "L.S." in the center answer the
purpose.

When the foregoing essentials are complied with the deed must be
delivered to the grantee. The delivery is essential, for without
it the deed is of no value, even though every other requisite be
complied with.

A deed may be made for land on which full payment has already been
acknowledged, but if the grantor dies before the deed is
delivered, then the deed has no legal value.

A deed obtained by fraud, deceit or compulsion is void.

RECORDING DEEDS

As soon as possible after the grantee has received the deed, he
should have it recorded.

In every county in the different states there is an officer, known
as register or recorder, whose duty it is to enter in regular
folios, or books, a copy of every deed or mortgage presented to
him. The document then becomes a part of the county records.

The grantee must pay the recording fees.

Anyone, on paying the fee for copying and certifying, can obtain a
copy of any document that has been recorded in a register's
office.

If an original deed is lost, the certified copy of the register
has all the legality of the original.

All deeds and other papers of value should be carefully kept, so
that they may be available, if needed.

A small safe deposit box with a company that keeps such spaces for
rent, is often a wise investment.

Keep all related papers in one package or envelope.

If there is one lawyer who attends to all your legal business, he
will be a good custodian of all papers of record, for he usually
has a fireproof safe.


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CHAPTER III

OTHER FORMS OF DEEDS--MORTGAGES



There is one condition under which the grantor does not turn over
or deliver the deed to the grantee after it is made. This is known
as a Deed in Escrow.

A deed "delivered in escrow" is when the document is placed with a
third party to be by him delivered to the grantee when a certain
time has elapsed or certain conditions have been fulfilled.

When the conditions have been complied with, the deed is given by
its custodian to the grantee, which is as legal as if it were
given by the grantor in person.

TRUST DEEDS

A trust deed is the form used to convey property to some person
who is entitled to its proceeds or profits.

This form of deed is often used to secure the payment of a debt.
In some states they take the place of mortgages.

Where the trust deed is meant to take the place of a mortgage to
secure a debt payment, the property is deeded to a third party
known as a "trustee."

The trustee in this case is the agent for debtor and creditor, and
he must act impartially.

The trust deed specifies the character of the debt to be secured.
In case of failure to pay the debt as agreed on, the trustee may,
if so warranted, sell the property, and pay the obligation from
the proceeds.

The grantor in a trust deed, if not stipulated to the contrary, is
entitled to all the rents and profits of the property; for it
remains virtually his, until he has failed to fill his contract.

When the indebtedness secured by the trust deed has been paid, the
trustee must at once execute a paper known to law as a Release
Deed. When recorded this instrument discharges the lien.

AS TO MORTGAGES

Mortgages are of two kinds, real and chattel. The first is a lien
on real estate, the second on personal property.

A mortgage may be defined as a conveyance of property, personal or
real, as security for the payment of a debt, or it may be given as
a guarantee for the performance of some particular duty.

MORTGAGE FORMS

When a mortgage is given as security for the payment of a debt,
the rule is to give a note for the payment of the amount involved.
The mortgage becomes in this case the security for the note's
payment.

In the body of the note it must be stated that it is secured by
mortgage.

The date of the note and mortgage should be the same.

The man who mortgages his property is the mortgagor.

The man to whom the mortgage is given is the mortgagee.

The form of the mortgage is the same as that of a deed, except
that it contains a clause called the Defeasance, which states that
when the obligation has been met the document shall be void.

MORTGAGES MUST BE RECORDED

The forms for "signing, sealing and delivering" a mortgage, are
the same as with a deed.

A mortgage must be recorded the same as a deed, the mortgagee
paying the fees.

Chattel mortgages are filed and recorded in the same way, except
that it is not usual to make copies of the instrument. They are
described in books prepared for the purpose.

A wife need not join her husband in making the note secured by a
mortgage, but if she agrees to the transaction it is necessary for
her to sign the mortgage; however, some states do not require
this.

PAYMENTS

Often a life insurance policy is used as security for the payment
of a mortgage.

The mortgagee, if there be buildings on the property, should see
that the buildings are insured and that the policy or policies are
made out in his name.

If the insurance policy is in the mortgagor's name he may collect
and keep the insurance money.

The mortgagor must meet, as stipulated, every payment of the
principal and interest.

Failure to meet one payment can result in a legal foreclosure.

When a payment is made, the date and the amount must be entered on
the back of the note. This should be done in the presence of the
mortgagor.

If possible always pay the obligation by check.

If a payment is accepted on a mortgage and the amount is not
sufficient to meet the sum required, the interest is first settled
in full, the rest is credited to the principal.

When the full amount, with interest, is paid in, it becomes the
duty of the mortgagee to have the mortgage "discharged."

A complete settlement is when, all payments being made, the
mortgagee surrenders the note and its security, and causes to be
written by the register, on the margin of the copy in his books,
the words, "discharged," or "satisfied," affixing thereto his
official signature and the date.

ASSIGNMENTS

A mortgage is regarded in law as personal property.

A mortgage need not remain in the hands of the mortgagee in order
to be valid. It can be sold like bonds, stocks or other property,
and there are men who deal only in that form of security.

In order to sell a mortgage, the owner must make, to the
purchaser, what is known as an "assignment of mortgage."

The assignment should be recorded in the same way as the original
mortgage, the assignee paying the fee.

REDEMPTION OF MORTGAGES

While the rule as to the redemption of mortgages remains the same
in some localities that it formerly was, the law in most places is
now more lenient.

Now the mortgagor who has failed is usually given by law an
extension of time in which to make good the payment of principal
and interest.

Lenders, when the interest is met, are content to let the mortgage
run on as an investment, though it will often be found, in such
cases, that it is better to make a new mortgage.

EQUITY OF REDEMPTION

Where the payments on a mortgage have not been met and the
instrument has not been foreclosed, the mortgagor has still what
is known as an "equity of redemption."

In some states after the foreclosure of the mortgage and the sale
of the property there is still a period of redemption of from
sixty days to six years.

The mode of foreclosure differs in some states. The usual method
is to foreclose on an order from the court, and to have the sale
conducted by a court officer.

The proceeds from the sale are used to pay the principal,
interests and costs. If there is money left over it is paid to the
mortgagor, whose interests in the property are then at an end.

Many people, not familiar with business methods, are inclined to
regard a mortgage as something of a disgrace, when, as a matter of
fact it is a most usual and honorable means of raising money for
the securing of a home or the conducting of a business.

Nearly all of the great railroads of the country have been built
by the sale of the mortgage bonds, which are usually renewed when
due, and are sought out as a safe and sane form of investment.

The fact that a mortgage payment has to be met on a farm is often
in itself the strongest inducement to industry and economy.


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CHAPTER IV

WILLS



Whether farmer, manufacturer, merchant or professional man, and
whether in youth, mid-age or declining years, every owner of
personal or real property, or both, should make a will.

If you have not made a will, get over the foolish notion that it
is a premonition of death, and do so at once.

A will is a written and signed declaration of the disposition one
wishes to have made of his property in the event of his death.

The maker of a valid will must be of sound mind and not less than
twenty-one years of age.

Women, whether married or single, if of proper age, are competent
to make a will.

OF TWO KINDS

A will may be written or unwritten.

Unwritten wills are known as "nun-cupative." Nun-cupative wills
are employed only when through accident, or sudden seizure by a
fatal disease, the time necessary to write and sign a will cannot
be had.

The unwritten will must be authenticated by reliable and
unprejudiced witnesses, and generally it can dispose of personal
property only.

In the written will no precise form is necessary, though when
drawn by a lawyer it usually begins with some such form as: "I,
George Brown, being of sound mind and good understanding, do make
and declare this to be my last will and testament", etc.

A will is not necessarily permanent. It may be cancelled or
changed in any way by the maker before his death, or a new will
can be made.

The last will cancels all preceding wills.

An addition to an existing will is known as a "codicil."

A man making a will is called a testator.

A woman making a will is called a testatrix.

LIMITATIONS OF WILLS

A man has a right to dispose of his property by will or gift as he
chooses, but if he is married the law compels him to consider the
rights of another.

The husband cannot, by will or otherwise, deprive his wife of her
"right of dower" in his real estate and appurtenances.

Unless she chooses to accept, the wife need not accept other
property that is bequeathed her in lieu of dower.

The wife's dower interest in her husband's estate is a life
interest only. On her death it goes to the husband's heirs, as if
there had been no widow.

In some states there is no right of dower.

HOW TO MAKE A WILL

The will not only shows the purpose of the testator, but it serves
as a bar to litigation among the natural heirs.

Any man or woman can write out his or her will, but unless quite
familiar with such work it is better to employ a lawyer for the
purpose.

The person named in the will to carry out the purpose of the
testator is known as the "executor".

No person, not twenty-one at the time the will is proved can act
as an executor.

Neither a convict, an imbecile, nor one known to be a drug fiend
or an habitual drunkard, is eligible for the post of an executor.
If an executor be appointed against his will, the law does not
compel him to serve.

There must be at least two witnesses to a will, some states
require three.

The witnesses need not know the contents of the will, but they
must understand before signing that it is a will, and they must
see it signed by the testator.

Under the common law the will is void if the witnesses are
beneficiaries.

In some states a will so witnessed is valid, except that the
witnesses cannot receive their legacies.

All the witnesses should sign at the same time and add their
addresses.

If an heir at law, say a child, is not mentioned in the will, the
law assumes that he was forgotten by the testator and generally
gives the share the heir would be entitled to if there were no
will.

At the end of the will the testator, in the presence of the
witnesses, should write his name in full.

AN EXECUTOR'S DUTIES

An executor is the legal representative of the testator. It is his
duty to see that the provisions of the will are carried out.

No man is qualified to act as executor who is not competent to
make a will. Executors, unless relieved by the provisions of the
will, are required to file bonds, proportioned to the value of the
estate, for the faithful performance of their duties.

Should there be no executor named in the will, or if the person so
named refuses to act, or if he dies or resigns, the court will
appoint a person to act in his place.

The executor appointed by the court is known or called an
"administrator with the will annexed."

In some states the court having jurisdiction of wills and estates
of deceased is known as "the probate," in others it is called the
"Surrogate's Court," and in still others, "The Orphan's."

ADMINISTRATORS AND THEIR DUTIES

If a man, owning property, dies without making a will, the judge
of the proper court will appoint an administrator to settle the
estate.

This is the method of procedure:

1. A person, interested in getting the estate settled, goes before
the proper judge and asks him to appoint an administrator.
2. The administrator must give the same bond as an executor. Their
duties are the same.
3. In settling the estate the administrator is governed by the
law, and by the special directions of the officer having
jurisdiction in such matters.
4. He must make a careful list of all the property belonging to
the estate. The value of the personal property is estimated by men
specially appointed by the court for the purpose and known as
"appraisers".
5. The administrator must account for every item of property that
comes into his possession.
6. All debts of deceased must be first paid, including funeral
expenses. If the proceeds of the personal property are not
sufficient for this purpose, the administrator may, if there be
real estate, sell the whole or part of it, on an order from the
court.

DEBTS

Debts must be paid in an order prescribed by law. The following is
the usual order:

1. Funeral expenses and expenses of last illness.
2. The widow's allowance or award.
3. Debts due the state or municipality.
4. Claims of other creditors.

Whatever property is left, after paying these obligatory sums, is
divided among the rightful heirs under the direction of the court,
and in the manner provided by law.

The administrator must advertise, in one or more county papers the
fact that he has been appointed to settle the estate of the
deceased, whose name is given, and he must ask that all claims be
presented within a given period, usually fixed at six months.

When the estate is settled to the satisfaction of the court, the
same authority releases the administrator and his bondsmen.

All the fees connected with the settlement are regarded as debts
and must be paid from the proceeds of the estate before closing.

THE FINAL SETTLEMENT

When the debts are paid and the residue divided among the heirs,
the administrator files his account. If it is allowed the case
ends.

The parties of interest in an estate may agree to settle it out of
court. This saves expense, but it is not the safest way.

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CHAPTER V

LETTER WRITING



What has been said about deeds and mortgages applies not only to
the farmer, but also to every owner of a building lot. The same
may be said of wills. They have a business interest for the town
as well as for the country dweller.

BUSINESS LETTERS

The purpose of this book being "strictly business," no attempt
will be made to instruct the reader in anything not connected with
the subject under consideration.

Social, friendly, and such letters are matters for individual time
and taste, and no rule can be laid down for their writing, but the
business letter is a different matter, and one which deserves
special consideration from every man or woman who receives an
order by mail, or who sends one.

To write a good business letter is no mean accomplishment, and
although a gift with some, it can be acquired by all.

A letter is, in a way, a testimonial of the character and ability
of the writer.

The purpose of a business letter is to express just what you want
and no more.

Any man with a good common school education, and a little patient
practice, can soon learn to write as good a business letter as the
college graduate.

Correct spelling may not be general, but it is certainly
desirable.

Letter writing, as in the preparation of other papers, has its own
well-recognized forms, and these may be easily learned.

Every properly constructed business letter should consist of the
following parts:

1. Where written from.
2. When written.
3. To whom written.
4. Address.
5. Salutation.
6. Introduction.
7. Purpose of letter.
8. Complimentary ending.
9. Signature.

THE HEADING

The letter should begin by giving the address of the writer,
followed by the date on which it was written. This will enable the
recipient to direct his reply.

If from a city, the street and number should be given.

If many letters are written it will be convenient to have the
permanent address of the writer printed.

The writing should be plain, and there should be no doubt in the
mind of the reader as to the proper spelling of the address and
signature.

Avoid the hieroglyphics which some vain men adopt in signing their
names. It may be fanciful, but it does not imply consideration for
the time and patience of strangers.

The following forms will serve to illustrate the type of heading
used in ordinary business letters:

1

124 Smith St., Brownsville, Mass.
September 4, 1910.
Mr. John Smith,
Doylestown, Penna.
Dear Sir:

2

Leroy, Mass.,
September 5, 1910.
Messrs. Brown and Jones,
Denver, Col.
Gentlemen:

3

4 Seminole St., Fort Smith, Ark.
September 6, 1910.
Mrs. Mary J. Robinson,
Lansing, Cal.
Dear Madam:

The "Mr.," "Mrs.," "Madam," and "Miss" are titles of courtesy and
should not be omitted. The abbreviation "Esq." for Esquire is
sometimes used; but the two titles Mr. and Esq. should never be
used with one name, as "Mr. John Smith, Esq."

If a man is known by a military or other title, always use it, but
never precede it with "Mr." nor follow it with "Esq."

Clergymen should always be addressed as "Rev.," the abbreviation
for Reverend. If he is a doctor of divinity, add D.D. to the name,
as "Rev. John Smith, D.D."

Medical doctors may be addressed as "Dr. John Smith," or "John
Smith, M.D."

THE GREETING

The greeting or salutation is a term of courtesy or esteem used in
addressing the one to whom the letter is sent.

"Sir" is the formal greeting, and is used in addressing officials,
or any strange male person. "Sirs," or "Gentlemen" may be used in
the plural. "Dear Sir," or "My Dear Sir," is the usual form of
greeting when a business letter is addressed to an individual.

Where the writer is acquainted with the person addressed, the
usual form of greeting is "Dear Mr. Smith."

THE LETTER ITSELF

If writing in response to a letter received, the writer should
begin in some such way as this:

Mr. Thomas Brown,
Newburg, N. Y.
My Dear Sir:

Your favor of the second inst. is just to hand. In reply permit
me to state, etc., etc.

This should be followed by the necessary statement, set forth in
clear, simple words.

Be sure of yourself.

The secret of good writing is clear thinking.

ENDING THE LETTER

There is much in the proper ending of a letter. In the ordinary
business letter the usual ending may be, "Yours truly," "Yours
very truly," or "Yours respectfully." Other endings used in
writing to business acquaintances are, "Yours sincerely," or "Very
sincerely yours," or you may substitute the words "Cordially" or
"Heartily" for "sincerely."

SIGNING THE LETTER

The name of the writer should be so clear and distinct as to leave
no doubt as to the spelling.

The name should always be written in the same way.

If your name is George W. Brown, do not write it at one time as
here given, and again as G. Washington Brown, or G. W. Brown.

Adopt one form and stick to it.

If you are writing for a firm or for another as clerk or
secretary, always sign the firm name, and below it your own name
preceded by the word "per," meaning "by" or "through."

THE MATERIALS

Never use scraps of paper or soiled paper to write on if better
can be had. The materials of a letter affect the receiver,
particularly if a stranger, just as one is affected by the garb of
a stranger before he speaks.

Use a good pen and black ink.

Fold your paper so that it will fit the envelope.

Avoid blots and erasures; they indicate carelessness or unbecoming
haste.

Address your letter distinctly.

Here is a good form:

Mr. George W. White,
Boston,
1101 Sioux St. Mass.

LETTERS OF INTRODUCTION

At some time or another one has to write a letter of introduction,
and sometimes he has had to pay for it.

If you should give such a letter to a man to introduce him to
another with whom you trade, the law has held that the introducer
is responsible for any reasonable bills the introduced may
contract with the receiver of the letter.

Never give a letter of introduction to a man you are not sure of.

In addressing a letter of introduction which is to be handed in
person, do it in this way:

Mr. George W. Brown,
Washington, D. C.
Introducing
Mr. Henry Wilson.

This shows on its face the nature of the communication.

Here is a good form:

111 Payne Ave., Montrose, Ill.
September 27, 1910.
Mr. Norman R. Lloyd,
Chicago, Ill.
Dear Mr. Lloyd:

This will introduce my esteemed
friend Mr. Thomas T. Fletcher, of this
town. Mr. Fletcher contemplates opening
a drug store in Chicago. Should he do so
he will prove an acquisition to your City.
Any favor you can render him will be much
appreciated by,
Yours faithfully,
George W. Brown.

RECOMMENDATIONS

Every man of standing and every employer of labor is at times
called on to certify to the character, or to give a testimonial to
some esteemed employee who is about to seek his fortune in another
place.

If you are about to hire a stranger, it adds to your confidence
and to his chances if he have a testimonial as to character and
fitness from his last employer, or from some man whose word you
value.

The letter of recommendation is usually of a general character and
not addressed to any particular. It should open in this way:

"To whom it may concern."

Follow this with your testimonial and sign it.

TITLES

The President of the United States is addressed as:
"His Excellency,"
William H. Taft,
Executive Mansion,
Washington, D. C.

Cabinet officers, Senators, Congressmen, members of the
Legislature, and Mayors of cities are usually addressed as "Hon.,"
the abbreviation of honorable.

The title "Hon." like "Esq." is often misused. After all titles of
courtesy are not obligatory, unless we regard the unwritten law of
custom in such matters as binding.

The very best kind of a letter, and perhaps the hardest to write,
is that in which the writer appears to be talking to us face to
face.




CHAPTER VI

BILLS, RECEIPTS AND ACCOUNTS



Try to understand clearly the meaning of all the business terms
you have to use.

The terms "bill" and "invoice" usually mean the same thing, that
is, a "bill of sale." This applies to goods sold, or services
rendered.

The merchant sends you an itemized invoice of the goods you
ordered and he has shipped.

The carpenter sends you an itemized bill of the work done by your
order.

Such a document should be regarded not as a "dun," but rather as a
record of the contract or transaction.

In the foregoing case the merchant and the carpenter are the
creditors, the recipient of the goods or work is the debtor.

BILLS FOR GOODS

In writing out a bill the date is the first thing to be
considered. This should be the same in form as a business letter.

This form will serve as an illustration:

Glenwood, N. J.
October 1, 1910.
Robert Brown
To George L. White, Dr.
Sept 2. For 25 lbs. sugar, at .06 . . .$1.50
" 6. " 30 lbs. ham, at .20 . . . . 6.00
" 14. " 100 lbs. flour, at .03-1/2 . 3.50
----
Received payment, $11.00

SIGNATURE ON PAYMENT

Wholesale houses send such bills as soon as the goods are shipped
or delivered, though the payment, as per agreement, is not to be
made for thirty, sixty or ninety days.

Where there is a running account, that is, frequent orders, with
total payments never completed, it is customary for the seller, at
the beginning of a calendar month to send to the creditor a
"statement." This statement does not repeat the items of the bills
rendered, its purpose being to show the balance due to date.

BILLS FOR LABOR

Where a mechanic or laborer is employed by the day at a fixed
wage, the length of time and dates should be given.

Richmond, Va.
November 3, 1910.
Charles M. Pratt,
To John Smith, Dr.
To 4 days, from Oct. 1st to 4th
inclusive, at $2.00..........$8.00
To 2 1/2 days, Oct. 10th, 11th
and 12th.................... 5.00
To 3 days, Oct. 17th, 18th and
19th ....................... 6.00
------
Received payment, $19.00
Signature.

This bill is just as transferable as a mortgage. If for any reason
Mr. Smith should decide to sell it, say to Robert Brown, he should
make the following endorsement across the back:

"In consideration of ------ dollars, the
receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, I
do hereby sell and assign to Robert Brown,
the written account, which is justly due
from the within named Charles W. Pratt,
and I hereby authorize the said Robert
Brown to collect the same.
"John Smith."
"Newburg, N. Y.
November 1, 1910."

Regarded simply from a business viewpoint and without considering
ethics, "Honesty is the best policy."

Bills, where possible, should be promptly paid.

Prompt payment is a guarantee of credit and credit is the heart if
not the soul of business.

Never, if it can be avoided, buy goods on the installment plan.

Be sure to get a receipt for all payments you make, and be equally
sure to keep the receipt where you can find it.

Examine all bills and invoices; compare them with the goods
received, and no matter what your faith in the seller's care and
honesty, calculate for yourself the price of each item, and be
sure that the total is correct.

DISCOUNT IN TRADE

It is a business custom, when a bill is paid before it is due, to
allow a discount. This may be the legal rate of interest, or any
percentage agreed on in advance.

Sometimes wholesale merchants or manufacturers grant esteemed
customers, in consideration of prompt payments, a discount from
the regular prices. This is known as "trade discount."

We often read of two or more discounts. A store keeper buys a bill
of goods for $350 and is granted 20% and 5% from the selling
price.

This does not mean a discount of 25% as the uninitiated might
think. The 20% is deducted from the $350, that is, $70, leaving
$280. Then the 5%, $14, is deducted from this, leaving $260.

Partial payments are not endorsed on the bill. The receipt is
written on a separate piece of paper. It differs from the usual
receipt in that the one is "in full payment" and the other "on
account."

Receipt no bill before it is actually paid.

Some one has translated the letters "C. O. D." into "Come omejitly
Down." The Collect on Delivery usually accompanies goods sent by
express.



BUSINESS TIPS FOR MEN & WOMEN: PART 2

 

PART 2: BUSINESS TIPS FOR MEN AND WOMEN


 




 


FORMS OF RECEIPTS


 


A receipt for a partial payment:


 


                Leavenworth, Kansas.


                     December 7, 1910.


  $75.00


    Received from Charles Long seventy-five


  dollars on account.


                        Henry S. Somers.


 


A receipt in full:


 


                         San Diego, Cal.


                          July 27, 1910.


  $260.75


    Received from N. O. Taylor, two hundred


  and sixty 75-100 dollars, in full payment


  to date.           Samuel G. Novris.


 


Another form:


 


                           Portland, Me.


                         October 20, 1910.


  $40.00


    Received from Thomas Moore, ten cords


  of hardwood, at $4.00 a cord, the sum to


  be applied to his account.


                           Daniel Forman.


 


In payment of rent:


 


  $17.00


    Received from William Forbes seventeen


  dollars in full payment of rent of premises


  No. 24 West Street, for the month ending


  October 31, 1910.


                          Philip F. Ross.


 


Where one person pays for another:


 


                Wilmington, Del.


                  August 17, 1910.


  $80.00


    Received from Alfred Thompson eighty


  dollars to apply to the account of Hiram O.


  Wells.


                   Baker Jones & Co.,


                       per, S. N. Thorp.


 


Receipts and other documents signed with a mark X should be


witnessed.


 


Payment on a note:


 


                Bridgeport, Conn.


                      July 1, 1910.


  $150.00


    Received from Casper N. Work one


  hundred and fifty dollars to apply on the


  payment of his note to me for six hundred


  dollars, dated March 8, 1910.


                       Ruben Hoyt.


 


The maker of the note should, in addition to getting his receipt,


have the amount of his payment endorsed on the back of the note by


the holder.


 


Where a receipt is given to the administrator of an estate his


position should be named as "Robert Fields, administrator of the


estate of John Jones, deceased."


 


WHAT IS AN ORDER?


 


An order is a command or instruction by one person to another to


do a stated thing.


 


An order may be given for the delivery of goods or the payment of


cash.


 


This is the usual form:


 


                       Dayton, Ohio.


                       August 3, 1910.


  Mr. G. W. McBride:


    Please deliver to Edward Lott goods


  from your store to the amount of ten dollars,


  and charge to my account.


                       F. T. Leroy.


 


This would be an order for cash:


 


                      Holden, Ind.


                      June 18, 1910.


  $30.00


    Mr. P. T. Mayhew. Please pay to Thomas


  Jackson thirty dollars and charge same


  to my account.


                     F. R. Wilson.


 


A DUE BILL


 


The customary form of a due bill is:


 


                    Durham, N. C.


                       May 1, 1910.


  $10.00


    Due George Smith ten dollars, payable


  in merchandise from my store.


                         S. T. Long.


 


 


 


 


CHAPTER VII


 


WHO SHOULD KEEP ACCOUNTS


 


 


 


To have any value, business accounts, whether of a great or a


small concern, must be accurately kept.


 


Every man and woman, having unsettled dealings with others, should


keep some sort of book accounts.


 


Storekeepers must keep accounts, and every farmer and mechanic,


who would know just what he owns and what he has spent during the


past month and year, should keep an exact account of every cent


received and paid out.


 


Lawyers and doctors know how to keep accounts, or if they do not


they are neglecting their own side of their professional duties.


 


Workers, skilled and unskilled, and even the hired girl who is


paid by the month, should keep a record of the compensation


received, and how the whole or the part has been expended.


 


No woman can be called a really good housekeeper who does not know


to a penny what has become of the money she has received for the


upkeep of her establishment, whether she have a score of servants


or does all her own work.


 


In order to keep such accounts, as have just been indicated, it is


not necessary to be a trained bookkeeper, or to know anything more


about the art than a good common school education gives.


 


Another word as to the farmer. I am not thinking in this


connection of the old-time, deep-in-the-ruts farmer, who never


learns and knows nothing to forget, but of that wide-awake


producer who tries to keep up with the times.


 


Not only should the farmer keep cash accounts, the form may be


quite simple, but all his business affairs should be kept in the


best possible trim.


 


Personal agreements without some kind of writing to back them up,


are dangerous.


 


Verbal contracts feed the lawyers.


 


All transactions involving labor or money should be recorded in


black and white.


 


Don't trust to your memory.


 


Don't rely on the memory of another.


 


AN ACCOUNT WITH CROPS


 


Every farmer should keep an account with each crop he raises and


even with every field he cultivates.


 


Against the farm should be charged--


 


1. Its annual rental value.


2. What all the labor would cost if hired.


3. New machinery.


4. Wear, tear and repair of old machinery.


5. Taxes.


6. Insurance.


7. Doctor's bills.


8. Interest on mortgage if any.


9. The cost of fodder, fuel, etc., consumed.


 


The farm should be credited with--


 


1. The rent.


2. The cost of everything produced and consumed on place.


3. The farm products sold.


4. The stock sold.


5. Increased value of stock.


6. Increased value of property, if any.


 


 


Such accounts you say will cause trouble; well, you cannot do


anything of value without trouble. The question is will the effort


pay? Those who keep such accounts say it does, and they are


usually the successful, progressive farmers.


 


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WORKING-MEN'S ACCOUNTS

 


The working man, skilled or unskilled, and the working man's wife


as well, should keep some form of cash book that will show from


week to week the receipts and expenditures.


 


One can be thrifty without being miserly.


 


Where did the money go?


 


Look at your book, where every cent expended has been set down,


and you will be surprised to find how the little sums total up.


 


Look over the list of little things bought and you will be


surprised to see how many were not needed.


 


Here is a simple form for a home record:


 


             Cash Received


1910.


Jan. 2. Balance on hand.........$45.50


  "  3. Work for Mr. Jones....... 1.75


  "  3. Smith paid bill......... 13.75


  "  9. Work for Mr. Brown....... 7.50


 


             Cash Paid


1910.


Jan. 2. Two shirts...............$1.50


  "  3. To wife for house........ 8.50


  "  4. Doctor C's. bill......... 6.00


  "  5. Fare to Troy............. 2.25


  "  6. Horse car................  .20


  "  6. Postage..................  .06


  "  7. Church Contribution...... 1.00


  "  8. Shoes mended............. 0.60


  "  9. Newspaper bill........... 1.00


 


 


Never "lump" what you receive or what you spend.


 


Set down each item separately, even to one cent.


 


When you have filled out each page of "received" and "paid" foot


it up and carry it to the next page set apart for the purpose.


 


An account book will cost but a few cents. Use the left-hand side


for receipts and the right for expenditures.


 


At any time the excess of the left hand over the right should show


the amount on hand.


 


Strike a balance at least once a month.


 


OTHER RECORDS


 


Never mix up another's accounts with your own.


 


John Smith, treasurer of some church, society, or club, is a


different person before the law from John Smith, the trader or


mechanic.


 


Funds not your own, and which may be added to or decreased from


time to time, as in the case of a society, say like the Odd


Fellows, should be kept in the bank not as John Smith's but as the


funds of "John Smith, Treasurer of Washington Lodge 110,


Independent Order of Odd Fellows," or whatever the name of the


society, club, or church may be.


 


In the same way, "a treasurer's book" should be kept and all the


receipts and expenditures carefully recorded.


 


COPIES


 


If a business proposition is made to another by mail, or if you


hand another in writing your proposition as to a certain contract


you are willing to undertake, for the consideration named, be sure


to keep a copy of the letter or contract; such a precaution may


save trouble.


 


 


 


 


CHAPTER VIII


 


AS TO BANKS


 


 


 


No instrument of trade has done so much or is more essential to


the safe and progressive business of the world today than the


bank.


 


Every department of business, in our modern civilization, must


keep in touch with the bank.


 


Money is the blood of trade and the banking system is its heart.


 


The bank is as necessary to the thrifty farmer as it is to the


greatest railroad or the most wide-spread trust.


 


Banks are depositories for money not in circulation.


 


Banks have facilities for the safe-guarding of money which the


ordinary business man could not provide for himself.


 


Instead of running the risk of paying bills with money carried


about on his person, the business man, and every man with ready


money should follow his example, deposits his money in a


convenient bank, for which he receives a proper voucher in the


shape of a credit in a deposit book.


 


When he pays a bill, he draws a check for the amount, payable to


the order of his creditor. This check, when endorsed by the


receiver and paid by the bank, is in itself a receipt for the


money.

 


 


NATIONAL BANKS


 


As I propose to say something about savings banks in another


chapter, the present will be devoted to what are known as "banks


of deposit."


 


Banks of deposit are either National, State, or private.


 


A National bank is, as the name implies, chartered and


incorporated by the Government, with special privileges and


restrictions.


 


The Government in the organizing of National banks had in mind the


protection of the public without unduly limiting the profit of the


stockholders.


 


The sum the stockholders must contribute to the establishment of a


National bank varies according to the population and the business


importance of the place in which the bank is to be located.


 


The capital must exist in a prescribed form.


 


Certain forms of investment are prohibited, as for instance the


ownership of real estate, except under certain restrictions.


 


This is done that the National bank may be able to convert its


securities into cash in the shortest order.


 


In consideration of a prescribed amount of United States bonds,


deposited with the Treasury in Washington, the Government issues


to the National bank a prescribed sum in printed bank notes of


varying denominations.


 


If the bank should close for any reason, the bank notes or their


equivalent must be returned, when the bonds deposited as security


are released.


 


Every bank must have a board of directors, a president and a


cashier. Receiving and paying tellers, with bookkeepers, and many


clerks are necessary to carry on the business of a large bank.


 


In addition, the National banks are under the supervision of


regularly appointed Government inspectors.


 


A National bank may fail, but its notes are still "as good as


gold."


 


BANKS AS LENDERS


 


The bank not only receives money on deposit, but it loans money


under certain conditions.


 


Many merchants, builders, contractors and others often find it


necessary to borrow money in order to carry on their business


successfully.


 


If a man's business reputation is good, and the banks keep well


posted in such matters, he may secure a loan on his own note,


though even in such cases the name of a good endorser is required.


 


If in addition to his note the borrower can offer security in the


way of bonds of good character, or other reliable collateral, he


can usually be accommodated.


 


Of course, the banks charge interest for loans. They also make


collections on notes and other commercial paper and they issue


foreign and domestic bills of exchange.


 


Every man with a sum large or small in excess of his expenditures,


should open a bank account. Even if not in business this will


encourage thrift and lead to good business habits.


 


INTEREST ON DEPOSITS


 


Some banks, particularly those known as "state" or "private," and


National banks in smaller communities, allow interest on deposits.


This interest varies with the demand for money, but in the eastern


states it seldom goes over four per cent.


 


It is well to know when interest begins and ends.


 


If the dates set by the bank for reckoning interest are the first


day of January, April, July and October, money deposited March


31st will begin to draw interest next day, but if deposited April


2nd, it would not begin to draw interest till July 1st.


 


But if you have the money and would insure its safety, deposit it


at once regardless of time or interest.


 


If a depositor withdraws his money before the day when interest is


due, he forfeits the interest. But banks vary as to that.


 


CHECK AND DEPOSIT BOOKS


 


Every depositor is given a book in which the teller or cashier


credits him on the left-hand side with the amount deposited. Other


deposits are treated in the same way, and at proper times, if


interest is allowed, it is added as a deposit.


 


The depositor can provide his own check book, and have it printed


in any color he pleases, with the name of himself and business on


the margin. The bank, however, will supply loose bank checks of


its own, or it may provide them in book form, with stubs, or a


space on which the number, amount and purpose of the check may be


noted for the drawer's information.


 


"Writing up" of the deposit book is leaving it with the proper


officer at the bank--a receipt for the book is never taken. It is


returned with all the checks received, and their amount footed up


on the right hand or debit page, and the balance on hand shown.


 


Every depositor should know from the record on the check stubs


exactly how his account stands with the bank.


 


Take care that you do not overdraw.


 


Keep your own record of your own money.


 


COMMERCIAL DEPOSIT BANKS


 


In the Commercial banks of our large cities no interest is


allowed, nor could it be easily calculated where a score of


deposits may be made in a week and a hundred checks drawn in a


day.


 


The depositor in such a bank is free to check out his funds as he


pleases.


 


Before opening an account there is more than money needed from the


depositor. If unknown, he must satisfy the bank of his character,


which is best done through the introduction of one known to both.


 


Some banks make a charge for deposits, where a man makes a


convenience of them by depositing money which he checks out in a


short time.


 


A depositor, when opening an account with a bank is required to


place his signature in a book kept for the purpose. Until the bank


officer, the paying teller, becomes familiar with the signature on


the check, he verifies it by comparing it with that in the book.


 



 

HOW TO PREPARE A CHECK

 


A check may be defined to be "a written order on a bank directing


it to pay a certain sum of money to the person named in the check


or to his order, and signed by a depositor."


 


So long as the purpose is clearly conveyed in the writing no


particular form of words is necessary, nor need the paper on which


the check is written be the regular printed form properly filled


in.


 


The "drawer" is the one who makes the check.


 


The "payee" is the one for whom the check is made.


 


In making a check, the best plan is to fill out the stub first,


and from the data on it make out the check. This tends to


accuracy.


 


Be sure to number your check, beginning with I.


 


Be sure that the number on the stub is the same as on the check.


 


A person having money in bank and wishing to draw for his own use,


makes his check payable to "self" or to "cash."


 


Usual form of check:


 


           First National Bank.   No. 27


            Kingston, Vt., Oct. 13, 1910.


      Pay to order of John Smith


      Seventy-five 75/100  ------ dollars.


      $75.75               George F. Brown.


 


It is proper form to specify on the face of the check the purpose


for which it is given, but while this is permissible it is not


usual.


 


Write the amount of the check first in words then in figures. This


makes more certain the amount.


 


Always begin first word of amount close to left-hand side of


check; when the whole sum is written down draw a heavy stroke


along the line to the word "dollars."


 


When a check is made payable to John Smith or order, John Smith


must sign his name on the back of the check--left-hand end and


about an inch from the top.


 


Never sign a check until you are ready to collect, or to bank it.


 


The payee can endorse the check to another by writing on the back


as follows:


 


      Pay to the order of


               Thomas Brown.


                            John Smith.


 


A check payable to "bearer" may be negotiated by any one. When


such checks are presented by a stranger, at the bank of the maker,


the paying teller always insists that the stranger be identified.


 


Never make a check payable to "bearer" if it can be avoided.


 


Sometimes checks are dated ahead, for reasons satisfactory to the


maker and payee.


 


A check drawn on August 5th, but dated August 20th cannot be


collected till the latter date.


 


Never date a check ahead unless you are positive that you will


have the money in bank to meet it on the day named.


 


Never, if you can avoid it in trade, receive a post-dated check.


 


Cash or deposit your checks as soon as possible after they are


received.


 


If the bank should fail, while you are holding the check, the


maker cannot be held for the loss.


 


CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT


 


Often when a depositor is travelling, he finds it convenient to


carry with him a form of paper that is as good as cash, and much


better in the event of loss.


 


Banks will issue "certified checks" to depositors. These checks


are stamped by the bank "certified" with the date and officer's


signature attached.


 


On issuing such a check, the bank debits the receiver's account


with the amount, and so can guarantee the payment whenever or


wherever presented.


 


Such a check may be received with as much certainty of its value


as if it were a bank bill.


 


When a person places money in a bank with no intention of checking


it out for some time to come, he may have issued to him a


"Certificate of deposit."


 


While holding this certificate he cannot check against the money


in the bank.


 


The holder of a certificate of deposit may transfer it.


 


The money may be paid in part by the bank, if the certificate is


presented, and the amount is endorsed on the back.


 


To withdraw all the money the certificate must be surrendered.


 


USE OF CHECKS


 


There is no form of commercial paper in such general use as the


check.


 


The total of all the checks in use at some seasons is far more


than the total of all the money in all the banks.


 


Checks are balanced in the money centers through what are known as


clearing houses. In these a bank is charged with checks against it


and credited with those in its favor.


 


The differences are settled by cash.


 


Often a few thousand dollars will settle check accounts amounting


to millions.


 


If by any chance you should receive a check in which your name is


misspelled, or not given as you write it, endorse the check


exactly as the name is written on the face, then add your name in


the regular way.


 


 


 


 


CHAPTER IX


 


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.


 


HOW SAVINGS BANKS EARN


 


How can a bank that does not discount notes or deal in loans and


commercial paper earn money? How can it pay interest?


 


While they may be individually small, the aggregate of all the


deposits in a savings bank may, and often do, amount to many


millions.


 


This money is not allowed to lie idle.


 


Under the skilled direction of the bank officers, the money,


instead of lying idle in the vaults, is invested in many ways, but


always in accordance with the laws of the state under which the


bank is chartered.


 


Much of the money is invested in mortgages on real estate, never


on personal property.


 


National bank stocks, sound railroad bonds, and other forms of


reliable interest security are fields for the investment of


savings bank funds.


 


Savings banks are subject to the periodic inspection of state


officers appointed for the purpose.


 


The failure of a savings bank through bad investments or the


dishonesty of officials is very rare.


 


Avoid all banks that promise more than the regular rate of


interest.


 


Private banks may be, and usually are, honestly conducted, but to


be safe, deposit only with a bank that is regularly chartered and


is subject to the inspection of the law.


 


The savings bank is the best for the wage earner.


 


 


 


 


CHAPTER X


 


NOTES--DRAFTS


 


 


 


The promissory note is a most useful kind of commercial paper, and


it is in general use in business.


 


If a man has not sufficient ready cash to pay for the real estate


he is about to purchase, he makes up the difference by a note,


which note is secured by a mortgage on the property.


 


Remember the mortgage must always be regarded as security. The


note represents the debt.


 


Often wholesalers take a note as part or even full payment for a


bill of goods to a retailer.


 


If the wholesaler needs money, he endorses these notes and putting


them in his bank draws against them, less the discount he has to


pay for the accommodation.


 


As has been shown, an account may be transferred and sold, but a


note is more convenient for that purpose.


 


AN ILLUSTRATION


 


As with a check the maker of a note is known as a "drawer," the


person in whose favor it is drawn is the "payee."


 


Notes may be written in pencil, but it is better and safer to


write with ink on good paper.


 


Supposing you buy a team of horses, or it may be a bill of goods,


from John Brown, for $350.


 


Now you have only $100 in cash. What are you to do?


 


Mr. Brown, knowing you to be reliable, says: "That's all right,


friend Jones. You pay me the $100 cash for which I will give you a


receipt, then I will take your note for six months, payable at my


bank."


 


You agree to this; pay out the money, make and deliver the note


and take the property in question, which is now yours as much as


it had been his before the transfer.


 


The following would be a legal form in which to make the note:


 


  $250.                             Summit, N. J.


                                  October 10, 1910.


  Six months after date I promise to pay to


  the order of John Brown..............


  Two hundred and fifty ...... dollars,....


  At the Lincoln National Bank of Summit


  .......... Value received.


                          George Jones.


    No. 1. Due April 14, 1911.


 


Now, if before the expiration of this note, you want to make a


payment on it of, say, $75, you take the money to Mr. Brown, who


endorses on the back of the note, "Received on the within note


$75, January 3rd.," if that be the date, and signs, "John Brown."


 


It may be well to remember that while a running account may be


collected at any time, the law cannot prevent the maker of a


promissory note from selling all his belongings and leaving the


country before the note is due.


 


DAYS OF GRACE


 


Notes may be "time" notes, that is where there is a specified time


for payment, or "demand" notes. The latter are collectable on


presentation.


 


With the time notes "three days grace" are allowed after the


expiration of the date for payment. No such favor is allowed in


the case of demand notes.


 


These grace days do not seem businesslike. Why not add them to the


date in the note? Well, it is a custom, quite as old as the


greater part of our laws, and so it must be observed.


 


Under the law a note is payable at the home or business place of


the drawer, unless otherwise specified.


 



 

INDORSING NOTES

 


A note secured by a mortgage has its payment guaranteed.


 


The usual way of securing the payment of a note given in business


is to have it endorsed with a good name across the back, as in


endorsing a check.


 


By writing your name across the back of another man's note you


announce to all the holders of that note that you know the maker


and that if he does not pay it you will.


 


In most states the indorser of a note cannot be held responsible


for payment, unless the holder notifies him, within twenty-four


hours after the note comes due, that the maker cannot or will not


pay.


 


If an indorsed note changes hands, each indorser is responsible to


all endorsers who follow him and also to the last holder of the


note.


 


If an indorser, that is, one into whose hands the note has come


after the first endorsement, should not wish to guarantee payment,


he writes before his name, "Without recourse to me."


 


This is known as a "qualified endorsement."


 


A NEGOTIABLE NOTE


 


Most notes are negotiable; that is because they may be sold, like


any other personal property, or the ownership may be transferred


from one person to another.


 


No note is negotiable that does not bear on its face, the words,


"Pay to bearer," or "Pay to the order of," followed by the payee's


name.


 


JOINT NOTES


 


When two persons sign a note they become jointly and individually


responsible for its payment.


 


Such persons are known as "joint makers."


 


If one signs his name on the back of a note before it has been


handed to the payee, he makes himself not only an endorser, but a


joint maker.


 


If the maker of such a note refuses to pay on the expiration of


time stated, he is liable for the amount without any notification.


 


DISCOUNTING NOTES


 


If a business man borrows from a bank on his note, he must pay for


the privilege.


 


Interest is a sum paid for the use of money.


 


Interest is reckoned as a certain percentage yearly on the


principal.


 


Interest on interest is called "compound interest" and is unused


in ordinary business transactions.


 


Instead of collecting interest when the amount borrowed on a note


is due, or deducting it from the principal in advance, it


discounts the note at the rate agreed on and pays the rest.


 


This is called bank discount and its rate is variable, depending


on the abundance or scarcity of money.


 


Money is a marketable article, and the price, like that of wheat


or cotton, is governed by supply and demand.


 


INTEREST ON NOTES


 


A note may be made payable "with interest," or not, as the parties


concerned may agree.


 


If nothing is said about interest in the note, no interest can be


collected.


 


Again a note may go into details and specify that "the interest


shall be ten per cent, payable semi-annually," provided always


that the rate shall not be higher than the legal interest of the


state.


 


Excessive interest is known as "usury." It invalidates all the


interest, and in some places the principal is forfeited.


 


When the holder of an interest note receives interest payment he


must record the date and sum on the back of the note.


 


PROTESTS


 


If a note comes due on Sunday or on a legal holiday, payment must


be made on the following day.


 


Holidays are appointed by the separate states.


 


The United States recognizes no day as a holiday, except Sunday,


and that is acknowledged through custom.


 


It is customary for banks to notify makers of notes held by them a


few days before time set for payment; but this is not required by


law.


 


If a note lies unpaid in bank the day set for payment, as soon as


the office closes for regular business the note is protested.


 


The protest is made before a notary public; he is usually an


employee of the bank.


 


In the protest formal objection is made against the breaking of


the promise, and demanding that the matter be set right by the


maker, or on his failure, by the indorser.


 


The indorser, who has to pay, has a claim for the amount on the


maker of the note, as he would have for money loaned or goods


sold, and he can sue to collect.


 


A note that is not paid within a fixed time is said to be


"outlawed."


 


Remember the indorser of a note must be notified within twenty-


four hours of the failure of the drawer to make good.


 


NOTICES


 


The object in protesting a note is to fix the liability on the


endorser.


 


If there be more than one endorser notice of protest must be sent


to all at the same time.


 


It is better, where possible, to serve the notices on the


indorsers in person.


 


The payee must also be notified.


 


ACCOMMODATIONS


 


There is a form of note sometimes used in business which is given


without any consideration on the part of the maker. This is known


as an "accommodation note."


 


The maker of such a note does not expect to pay it, nor does the


man in whose favor it is drawn expect to do so.


 


An accommodation note is an instrument by the sale of which, or


through a bank, money may be raised for immediate use.


 


The maker in this case is a friend who loans his name.


 


As there was no value received such a note could not be collected


by the payee.


 


But if it passes into the hands of a third party, who endorses it,


then the maker of the note can be compelled to pay.


 


A LOST NOTE


 


A note may be lost or stolen.


 


The losing of a note does not release the maker from payment of


the full amount on the date and at the place named.


 


The loser should at once notify the maker of his loss.


 


A man who buys, before its maturity, a lost or stolen note, may


collect the full amount from the maker, provided the note is


payable to "bearer" and no notice of the loss has been published.


 


When the maker of a lost note pays the amount to the original


owner, he should receive from him what is known as a "bond of


indemnity."


 


This bond is to secure him against paying a second time.


 


NOTES ABOUT NOTES


 


There are some things worth remembering about promissory notes.


 


1. Never give one if you can pay cash.


2. A note made on Sunday is worthless in some states.


3. A note given under compulsion is worthless.


4. Notes made by a drunken person, or obtained by any form of


fraud cannot be collected under law.


5. Notes bear interest only when so stated in body of note.


6. The holder of a note has a legal claim against every indorser.


7. Each indorser is responsible to every indorser who follows him.


8. Notes are valid without reference to the kind of paper, or


whether they are written with pen or pencil.


9. Losing a note does not release the maker from payment.


10. If no time is set in a note for payment, it becomes due as


soon as it is made.


11. Where a note is made in one state and is payable in another,


it is governed by the laws of the state in which it is to be paid.


12. Notes payable on demand draw no interest until after they have


been presented for payment.


13. If a note reads "with interest" and no rate is specified then


it draws the legal interest in the state in which it was made.


14. Demand notes are not entitled to days of grace.


15. If no place of payment is named in a note, it should be


presented to the maker personally in business hours.


16. The misspelling of a word or words in no way invalidates a


note.


17. If a person who cannot write makes a note his mark should be


properly witnessed.


18. The makers of a joint note must be sued jointly.


19. If the words and the figures in a note disagree, the words


take precedence.


20. A note signed by a firm may be collected from either of the


partners.


21. When a payment is made on a note secured by a mortgage, the


amount is endorsed on the note, never on the mortgage.


22. A note given by a minor is void, unless given for actual


necessities, like food and clothing.


23. If a note made by a minor is acknowledged when he comes of age


it is binding and collectible.


 


 


 


 


CHAPTER XI


 


A DRAFT


 


 


 


A draft is a written order from the first party to the second


party to pay to the third party a certain sum of money at a


certain time.


 


The first party is called the "drawer."


 


The second party is the "drawee."


 


The third party is the "payee."


 


There are two kinds of draft.


 


The first is usually where the cashier of one bank, through his


own check, draws on another bank for the cash difference in their


accounts with each other.


 


The second form of draft is the most usual and is the one we shall


here consider.


 


The cashier's draft is always for cash and the demand is always


honored. The ordinary business draft may be for cash or for goods.


 


The business draft is usually honored, but there are circumstances


under which it may be ignored.


 


TO MAKE A DRAFT


 


But let us suppose that the draft is all right and that a


merchant, let us call him Henry Thomas, and suppose him a resident


of Philadelphia, has a bill against James Taylor, of Cleveland,


and he wants to collect it, without recourse to law. How will he


go about it?


 


The bill is for $100.


 


Mr. Thomas writes this draft:


 


     Philadelphia, Pa., Sept. 5, 1910.


   At sight pay to the order of


   Johnson National Bank of Philadelphia


   One hundred................... dollars.


               With exchange


             and charge same to


                          Henry Thomas.


   To James Taylor,


       Cleveland, Ohio.


 


Having drawn his draft, Mr. Thomas takes it to the Johnson


National Bank for collection. The collection is actually made by


some bank in Cleveland to which the Johnson has endorsed it over.


 


If Mr. Thomas wished he might have sent his draft direct to the


Cleveland bank, but he no doubt thought it better to transact such


matters through his own bank.


 


Or if Mr. Thomas lived where he was not in touch with a bank, he


might have drawn through any person whom he knew in Cleveland.


 


On receiving the draft for collection, the Cleveland bank would at


once give it to a clerk who would without delay present it to Mr.


Taylor.


 


Mr. Taylor, having written his acceptance of the draft, is given


three days grace in which to make payment.


 


In states where days of grace are not allowed, he would have to


pay at once.


 


Mr. Taylor writes the word "accepted," with the date and his name


across the face of the draft, and if he does not pay cash, he


states in the writing where payment will be made.


 


Of course, Mr. Taylor cannot be compelled to accept a draft. There


may be good and honest reasons for his not doing so, but having


accepted it, in business honor he is bound to pay it.


 


The term "Sight draft" explains itself, but the order to pay a


draft may indicate, and often does, the number of days allowed for


payment, after presentation.


 


FOR COLLECTION


 


What should be done by the man to whom a bill or a note is due,


when the debtor lives in a place where there is no bank?


 


In that case he must learn in some way the name of a promising


person to make the collection for him.


 


In this case he makes out the draft as before, and adds the words


"for collection." This acts as a bar to any transfer of the paper.


 


Most banks refuse to handle a draft marked "for collection."


 


DISHONOR


 


Drafts are not necessarily duns.


 


Some country merchants prefer to pay their bills to wholesalers in


that way, so that collecting drafts is no small part of the


business of the ordinary bank.


 


While men are not compelled to meet drafts when presented, if the


amount is due and he defaults or refuses to pay he injures his own


credit.


 


In refusing a just draft he is said to "dishonor" it.


 


So sure are wholesalers that their drafts will be met by their


distant debtors that they do not hesitate to draw against them


when deposited for collection, regarding them as cash to their


credit in bank.


 


PROTESTS


 


When a draft is not accepted or paid when due, if it be a time


draft, it is protested in the same way as a note.


 


The protest of a draft serves as a notice to the drawer of its


non-acceptance.


 


Like notes and checks, drafts may be transferred by a similar


endorsement.


 


BUYING DRAFTS


 


If I wanted to pay a bill for $150 to Albert Holt, living at


Wallace, Kansas, and did not wish to trouble him with a check, how


would I go about it?


 


1. I might express the cash, which would be expensive.


2. I might send it in postal order, not always certain.


3. I might send it by a trusted hand, but might have long to wait


before I found a friend going out to Wallace.


 


I am living in New York City, and am familiar enough with banking


to know that New York is a great financial center and is in


constant communication with nearly all the outside banks.


 


The outside banks keep money in deposit here, and the New York


banks, particularly in the spring and autumn, keep deposits with


their correspondents.


 


With my $150 and a small extra sum to pay my bank for drawing the


draft, I go thither and buy a draft for the sum I owe Mr. Holt.


 


I mail this draft to my creditor and he can cash it without loss


in his home bank. Here is the form:


 


                              No. 101.


    Madison National Bank of New York.


  Pay to the order of Albert Holt,


  One hundred and fifty dollars ($150.)...


  ..........               L. N. Jones,


                                 Cashier.


  To Prairie National Bank,


    Wallace, Kansas.