History of Westchester County, New York, Vol. II
The directors are now Gus Linn, president ; Geo. L. Vogler, cashier; John Filer, Dr. P. C. Mockett, Vernon Linn. This bank is now housed in a room with magnificent fixtures. It has an especially equipped ladies' rest room, private telephone booths, two waiting rooms equipped with large desk, chairs, and settee. A private consultation room, safe deposits vaults with 250 boxes. The bookkeeping room is away from the banking room. All of the fixtures and furniture are of black walnut and marble.
The Citizens State Bank started in Octotures are black walnut and walls are Alabama marble to the height of fifty-four inches, with plaster and stucco above this. It has skylights and all of the other fixtures are of black walnut and marble. The American State Bank has likewise equipped itself with similarly splendid furnished room on the corner formerly occupied by the Kimball Hotel.
Kimball County Bar Kimball had an early influx of lawyers, coincident with the settlement of this territory. In the eighties came George Mover, and then James W. Davis, C. F. Robertson and I. I. Kinney. F. H. DeCastro came about 1906, and W. J. Ballard about 1907. D. Regione practiced here commencing about this period. Ballard. Regione and Kinney were the enrolled Kimball County
HISTORY OF WESTERN NEBRASKA
Bar in 1910. James A. Rodman and his brother, Roland V. Rodman, entered practice at Kimball in recent years. Attorney A. O. Torgeson came to Kimball some three or four years ago and in 1920 he was joined by Attorney R. M. Higgins of Omaha. So Kimball county now has a splendid bar, of both older and younger legal lights. James A. Rodman is making a legislative record in the sessions of 1919 and 1921, and in the constitutional convention of 1920, that follows creditably upon the long legislative record of B.