The treasurer of a savings association is an officer with general powers analogous to the cashier's powers in a bank. A suit instituted on behalf of the savings association by its treasurer is presumed to be authorized.1 Ho may authorize the attorney of the corporation to levy execution upon land and to purchase the same for the bank, and in pursuance thereof to bring a writ of entry.2 A manager of a branch bank has power to bind the bank as an accommodation in-dorser upon a draft payable at a branch bank.3 In fact the manager of a branch bank must necessarily represent for that branch all the corporate power. It would be difficult to find a corporate officer with as much authority, for as to the branch he must to the general public be a board of directors, a president and a cashier.4 An agent with a general authority binds the bank by his transfer as a matter of course.5 An authority given to an agent carries with it the powers necessary or fairly adapted to carrying out the authority.6 But a clerk acting as cashier in place of an absent cashier has authority to indorse the bank's paper only for collection.7