38
POSTAL SAVINGS
master-General, the Secretary of the Treasury
and the Attorney-General. On these trustees
w'as conferred "power to make all necessary and
proper regulations for the receipt, transmittal,
custody, deposit, investment and repayment of
the funds deposited at postal savings depository
offices.” This board is somewhat similar to the
Postal Savings Bank Investment Board of the
Philippines. 1 The three officials are supposed to
represent respectively three important aspects of
postal savings bank work, administrative, finan
cial and legal. The establishment of a postal
savings bank in the United States was looked
upon by many of its sponsors as an experiment,
and it was the clear intention of Congress to give
wide discretionary powers to the Board of Trus
tees, so that they might feel their way carefully
in extending and developing the system. 2 As it
passed the Senate, the Carter bill contained no
provision for a board with wide discretionary
powers but placed the administration in the
hands of the Postmaster-General. This likewise
was the plan in the substitute bill recommended
to the House by the minority of the Committee
on Post Offices and Post Roads. 3 The minority
1 Kemmerer, The Philippine Postal Savings Bank, in An
nals Amer. Acad., XXX, No. 1, p. 48.
2 Cf. House Report No. 1445, 61 Cong., 2 Sess., pp. 1-2.